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The cut-off term in Arabic grammar

    Author

    • Fatr kahila

    Mastr, Arabic language Department,Faculty of Arts and Humanities , Tishreen University, Latakia – Syria

,

Document Type : Scientific- Research Article

10.22075/lasem.0621.5699
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Abstract

This research deals with the cut-off term grammatically. That term has been repeated in Arabic grammar and prosody sciences. The research tries to trace the cut-off term in grammar, stopping at four types: cut-off in exception, cut-off in addition, cut-off in the predicate invalidators, and cut-off in dependencies.
The research found that the cut-off in the exception is in the intermittent exception, in which the exception was not some of the exempted from it. The research stopped at the tools that are used for the intermittent exception. As for cutting off in the addition, after the research clarified the meaning of the addition, it examined what is permissible to cut off from the verbal addition, not in the meaning, then the research looked at the nouns that are not in adverbs and explained their provisions in terms of the cut off, so the words each and some - for example - may be cut off from the addition in a word not in meaning, provided that they do not occur as an affirmation.
The research also dealt with the cut-off toward elevation in the predicate invalidators, and discussed what was mentioned in the grammar books about the grammatical evidences in this section. Finally, the research ends with the study of the cut-off in the Followers, which is well-known and common in the grammar, and less common in the grammatical substitution and grammatical conjunctions. The research studied and discussed each of them, trying to show the cut off term in grammar.

Keywords

  • Cut-off
  • the exception
  • the addition
  • Arabic grammar

Main Subjects

  • Exchange & grammar
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References
The Sources and References:
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Studies on Arabic Language and Literature
Volume 11, Issue 32
Volume 11, Issue 32, Fall 2020 and Winter 2021
March 2021
Pages 67-88
Files
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  • PDF 1.16 M
  • Full Text in second language
History
  • Receive Date: 13 September 2015
  • Revise Date: 26 September 2015
  • Accept Date: 07 January 2016
  • Publish Date: 01 March 2021
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How to cite
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Statistics
  • Article View: 1,825
  • PDF Download: 668

APA

kahila, F. (2021). The cut-off term in Arabic grammar. Studies on Arabic Language and Literature, 11(32), 67-88. doi: 10.22075/lasem.0621.5699

MLA

kahila, F. . "The cut-off term in Arabic grammar", Studies on Arabic Language and Literature, 11, 32, 2021, 67-88. doi: 10.22075/lasem.0621.5699

HARVARD

kahila, F. (2021). 'The cut-off term in Arabic grammar', Studies on Arabic Language and Literature, 11(32), pp. 67-88. doi: 10.22075/lasem.0621.5699

CHICAGO

F. kahila, "The cut-off term in Arabic grammar," Studies on Arabic Language and Literature, 11 32 (2021): 67-88, doi: 10.22075/lasem.0621.5699

VANCOUVER

kahila, F. The cut-off term in Arabic grammar. Studies on Arabic Language and Literature, 2021; 11(32): 67-88. doi: 10.22075/lasem.0621.5699

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