Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic
The sequence of clause elements not only determines the syntactic relations of categories but also recognizes the semantic and pragmatic roles associated with them. Therefore, this paper aims to examine reversibility in verbless Equational Clauses (ECls) by investigating the syntactic, experienti...
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Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2021
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Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18527/1/49805-172411-2-PB.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18527/ https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1440 |
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my-ukm.journal.185272022-04-27T00:11:04Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18527/ Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic Hanaa Samaha, Yap, Teng Teng Kumaran Rajandran, The sequence of clause elements not only determines the syntactic relations of categories but also recognizes the semantic and pragmatic roles associated with them. Therefore, this paper aims to examine reversibility in verbless Equational Clauses (ECls) by investigating the syntactic, experiential (Transitivity), and textual (thematic and informational) features of the reversed elements in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) within the Cardiff Grammar model (CG). The data consists of 138 ECls collected from twelve articles in seven daily newspapers, out of which thirty-one ECls have been identified as reversed. The findings have revealed that Subject and Complement can be optionally reversed in ECls to achieve discourse purposes. In this case, when optional reversibility represents the Unmarked Participant Role Theme, the reversed elements retain none of their syntactic, experiential, thematic, and informational meanings. But when optional reversibility reflects the Marked Participant Role Theme, the reversed elements retain their syntactic and experiential functions but not necessarily their thematic and informational meanings. On the other hand, obligatory reversibility has been argued to stem from the syntactic constraints concerning the violation of the definiteness norm and the pragmatic factors. Finally, the paper concludes that the association of the ‘Theme’ concept with what comes early in the clause should not be taken as a universally unified concept applied to all languages. The findings imply that in designing syllabi for language learning and teaching, learners should be made aware of the significant interplay of linguistic and extra-linguistic factors that cause the inversion of the clause elements. This would probably help them reflect on understanding the sentences they receive and produce in different contexts. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2021-11 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18527/1/49805-172411-2-PB.pdf Hanaa Samaha, and Yap, Teng Teng and Kumaran Rajandran, (2021) Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic. GEMA ; Online Journal of Language Studies, 21 (4). pp. 147-171. ISSN 1675-8021 https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1440 |
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The sequence of clause elements not only determines the syntactic relations of categories but
also recognizes the semantic and pragmatic roles associated with them. Therefore, this paper
aims to examine reversibility in verbless Equational Clauses (ECls) by investigating the
syntactic, experiential (Transitivity), and textual (thematic and informational) features of the
reversed elements in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) within the Cardiff Grammar model (CG).
The data consists of 138 ECls collected from twelve articles in seven daily newspapers, out of
which thirty-one ECls have been identified as reversed. The findings have revealed that Subject
and Complement can be optionally reversed in ECls to achieve discourse purposes. In this case,
when optional reversibility represents the Unmarked Participant Role Theme, the reversed
elements retain none of their syntactic, experiential, thematic, and informational meanings. But
when optional reversibility reflects the Marked Participant Role Theme, the reversed elements
retain their syntactic and experiential functions but not necessarily their thematic and
informational meanings. On the other hand, obligatory reversibility has been argued to stem
from the syntactic constraints concerning the violation of the definiteness norm and the
pragmatic factors. Finally, the paper concludes that the association of the ‘Theme’ concept with
what comes early in the clause should not be taken as a universally unified concept applied to
all languages. The findings imply that in designing syllabi for language learning and teaching,
learners should be made aware of the significant interplay of linguistic and extra-linguistic
factors that cause the inversion of the clause elements. This would probably help them reflect
on understanding the sentences they receive and produce in different contexts. |
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Article |
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Hanaa Samaha, Yap, Teng Teng Kumaran Rajandran, |
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Hanaa Samaha, Yap, Teng Teng Kumaran Rajandran, Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic |
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Hanaa Samaha, Yap, Teng Teng Kumaran Rajandran, |
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Hanaa Samaha, |
title |
Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic |
title_short |
Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic |
title_full |
Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic |
title_fullStr |
Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic |
title_full_unstemmed |
Reverse and Reserve : a Cardiff Grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard Arabic |
title_sort |
reverse and reserve : a cardiff grammar account on reversibility in equational clauses in modern standard arabic |
publisher |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18527/1/49805-172411-2-PB.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18527/ https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1440 |
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