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No where in Ethnologue definition of Adeni-Ta'izzi Arabic does it say it's also known as "Djibouti Arabic". --يوسف حسين (talk) 16:59, 12 February 2014 (UTC)Reply
This comment was moved from my talk page --Mahmudmasri (talk) 16:30, 28 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
Please stop attacking other editors, as you did on Taʽizzi-Adeni Arabic. If you continue, you may be blocked from editing. Comment on content, not on other contributors or people. SharabSalam (talk) 16:06, 28 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
“ | The phoneme known as jīm, which was realized either as a voiced palatal stop (Gairdner 1925: 23; Fischer and Jastrow 1980: 105; Watson 1992: 73) or as a voiced palatalized velar stop (Schaade 1911: 73; Cantineau 1960: 58) in early Classical Arabic, is realized in most dialects today as a voiced palatoalveolar affricate or velar stop. It has the reflex /dʒ/ in most Bedouin dialects, in many rural Syrian, Jordanian, Palestinian, and Mesopotamian dialects (Holes 1995: 61), and in the central region of northern Yemen (Behnstedt 1985: 42). In Cairene and in Yemeni dialects spoken in Ta’izz and in the Hugariyyah, the phoneme is realized as a voiced velar stop, /g/, as was probably the case in proto-Semitic (see Section 1.1.1) and early pre-Classical Arabic. The phoneme is realized as a voiced palatal stop, /ɟ/, in parts of the Arabian Peninsula, including some northern Yemeni dialects (Behnstedt 1985: 42), Upper Egypt and parts of Sudan (Fischer and Jastrow 1980: 105). In the Syrian desert, Khuzistan, Hadramawt, Dhofar, and the Gulf dialects, the sound has lenited to a palatal glide, /j/. In many areas of the Levant, especially the major cities of Beirut, Damascus, and Jerusalem (Holes 1995: 61) and in the majority of Maghribi dialects (cf. Heath 1987: 20–1 for Moroccan), the phoneme does not have an initial occlusive element and is realized as /ž/. | ” |
--Mahmudmasri (talk) 16:30, 28 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
"Not in the source. Next time put the source even before you add a content and write what the source explicitly states"and the source doesn't say it is "associated" which means "connected with" see what the source says and write only what the source explicitly says don't make things up see WP:OR. The bolded text doesn't support your addition. I am not an admin but I can definitely get you blocked for couple of issues now like personal attack and not assuming good faith like saying that I reverted you because I am from a certain place and you are not. Also Hugariyyah is not a synonym for Tihamiyya where did you come up with this?. Hugariyyah is just a another spelling of al-Hujariah which is a region in Taiz Governorate(not to be confused with Taiz city which is where the Adeni dialect is spoken). It has nothing to do with Tihamiyya dialect or Tihamah region. And BTW I read the source although I didn't directly download it (through a telegram bot).--SharabSalam (talk) 21:16, 28 July 2019 (UTC)Reply
"...like Tihami dialect, a feature commonly associated with Egyptian Arabic".oh its commonly associated to Egyptian Arabic, according to who?.
"The most arrogant/ignorant comment. The source was added with the page, I won't teach you to read if you can't; Undid revision 908151966 by SharabSalam (talk)". So I have the right to tell you that you might get blocked for personal attack whether you liked my tone or not. That's something I should do before you do another personal attack.
As per the guidelines on the WikiProject for Languages, I have added four sections to the stub, a classification section, a history section, a phonology section, and a vocabulary section. I have also rewritten what was previously in the stub to be more expansive and provide more detail. If anybody has any further information that they believe could be added to the stub, or if you believe that I may have added dubious or erroneous information, please feel free to reply to this and contribute. Thomash63 (talk) 01:18, 13 November 2020 (UTC)Reply
yemen and Somaliland 154.115.231.207 (talk) 22:38, 12 January 2024 (UTC)Reply