The Georgetown Dictionary of Moroccan Arabic: Arabic-English, English-Arabic

[Georgetown University Press] ¿ The Georgetown Dictionary of Moroccan Arabic: Arabic-English, English-Arabic ☆ Read Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. The Georgetown Dictionary of Moroccan Arabic: Arabic-English, English-Arabic ·Employs International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) for all terms to demonstrate correct pronunciation and allows comparison across dialects. ·Features over 13,000 Moroccan Arabic-English entries and 8,000 English-Arabic entries. ·Includes borrowed words commonly used in Moroccan Arabic, such as those from French, Spanish, and Amazigh. ·Contains extensive example sentences and an appendix showing the roots of words with prefixes both to help learners.. Scholars and lin

The Georgetown Dictionary of Moroccan Arabic: Arabic-English, English-Arabic

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Rating : 4.98 (989 Votes)
Asin : 1626163316
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 760 Pages
Publish Date : 2013-11-12
Language : English

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About the AuthorMohamed Maamouri is a retired professor of linguistics at the Manouba University in Tunisia and a retired senior researcher and research administrator at the Linguistic Data Consortium at the University of Pennsylvania, where he directed the Arabic Treebank Group and the development of Arabic lexical resources and projects. . He specializes primarily in Arabic computational linguistics and Natural Language Processing, Arabic literacy and reading, language development, language planning, corpus linguistics, educational linguistics, and sociolinguistics

·Employs International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) for all terms to demonstrate correct pronunciation and allows comparison across dialects. ·Features over 13,000 Moroccan Arabic-English entries and 8,000 English-Arabic entries. ·Includes borrowed words commonly used in Moroccan Arabic, such as those from French, Spanish, and Amazigh. ·Contains extensive example sentences and an appendix showing the roots of words with prefixes both to help learners.. Scholars and linguists are certain to find this complex and challenging dialect informative and useful in discussions of Arabic dialectology. Students, teachers, and scholars of Arabic will welcome this up-to-date resource, which includes key Mo

Mohamed Maamouri is a retired professor of linguistics at the Manouba University in Tunisia and a retired senior researcher and research administrator at the Linguistic Data Consortium at the University of Pennsylvania, where he directed the Arabic Treebank Group and the development of Arabic lexical resources and projects. He specializes primarily in Arabic computational linguistics and Natural Language Processing, Arabic literacy and reading, language d

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