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Souag L (2007). Mena Lafkioui. 2007. Atlas linguistique des variétés berbères. Afrikanistik online, Vol. 2007. (urn:nbn:de:0009-10-11900)
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%0 Journal Article %T Mena Lafkioui. 2007. Atlas linguistique des variétés berbères %A Souag, Lameen %J Afrikanistik online %D 2007 %V 2007 %N 4 %@ 1860-7462 %F souag2007 %X In the mountainous landscape of northeastern Morocco, a fairly large geographically contiguous Berber-speaking area with a few million inhabitants is to be found, called the Rif. Its people are generally described as speaking a single Zenati Northern Berber language, Tarifit, apart from in its southwestern corner, where another non-Zenati Northern Berber language, Senhaji, may be distinguished. While such a description is well-founded as far as it goes, it often represents a great oversimplification, as Mena Lafkioui's work reveals. Historical linguists looking at innovations within Berber, typologists examining diversity, syntacticians looking at microvariation, anthropologists seeking to trace migrations - all will benefit greatly from this work, which makes it both possible and imperative to resist the temptation to say “Tarifit does so-and-so” in favour of a more nuanced account of variation within the Rif. Even many elements commonly thought of as characteristic of the Rif, such as the sound change l > r, are revealed to be in truth characteristics of a particular central area within the Rif, with older forms still conserved along the outskirts, or to be just a particular case within a large array of forms. %L 490 %K Berber %K Morocco %K Rif %U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-11900Download
Bibtex
@Article{souag2007,
author = "Souag, Lameen",
title = "Mena Lafkioui. 2007. Atlas linguistique des vari{\'e}t{\'e}s berb{\`e}res",
journal = "Afrikanistik online",
year = "2007",
volume = "2007",
number = "4",
keywords = "Berber; Morocco; Rif",
abstract = "In the mountainous landscape of northeastern Morocco, a fairly large geographically contiguous Berber-speaking area with a few million inhabitants is to be found, called the Rif. Its people are generally described as speaking a single Zenati Northern Berber language, Tarifit, apart from in its southwestern corner, where another non-Zenati Northern Berber language, Senhaji, may be distinguished. While such a description is well-founded as far as it goes, it often represents a great oversimplification, as Mena Lafkioui's work reveals. Historical linguists looking at innovations within Berber, typologists examining diversity, syntacticians looking at microvariation, anthropologists seeking to trace migrations - all will benefit greatly from this work, which makes it both possible and imperative to resist the temptation to say ``Tarifit does so-and-so'' in favour of a more nuanced account of variation within the Rif. Even many elements commonly thought of as characteristic of the Rif, such as the sound change l > r, are revealed to be in truth characteristics of a particular central area within the Rif, with older forms still conserved along the outskirts, or to be just a particular case within a large array of forms.",
issn = "1860-7462",
url = "http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-11900"
}
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RIS
TY - JOUR AU - Souag, Lameen PY - 2007 DA - 2007// TI - Mena Lafkioui. 2007. Atlas linguistique des variétés berbères JO - Afrikanistik online VL - 2007 IS - 4 KW - Berber KW - Morocco KW - Rif AB - In the mountainous landscape of northeastern Morocco, a fairly large geographically contiguous Berber-speaking area with a few million inhabitants is to be found, called the Rif. Its people are generally described as speaking a single Zenati Northern Berber language, Tarifit, apart from in its southwestern corner, where another non-Zenati Northern Berber language, Senhaji, may be distinguished. While such a description is well-founded as far as it goes, it often represents a great oversimplification, as Mena Lafkioui's work reveals. Historical linguists looking at innovations within Berber, typologists examining diversity, syntacticians looking at microvariation, anthropologists seeking to trace migrations - all will benefit greatly from this work, which makes it both possible and imperative to resist the temptation to say “Tarifit does so-and-so” in favour of a more nuanced account of variation within the Rif. Even many elements commonly thought of as characteristic of the Rif, such as the sound change l > r, are revealed to be in truth characteristics of a particular central area within the Rif, with older forms still conserved along the outskirts, or to be just a particular case within a large array of forms. SN - 1860-7462 UR - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-10-11900 ID - souag2007 ER -Download
Wordbib
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ISI
PT Journal AU Souag, L TI Mena Lafkioui. 2007. Atlas linguistique des variétés berbères SO Afrikanistik online PY 2007 VL 2007 IS 4 DE Berber; Morocco; Rif AB In the mountainous landscape of northeastern Morocco, a fairly large geographically contiguous Berber-speaking area with a few million inhabitants is to be found, called the Rif. Its people are generally described as speaking a single Zenati Northern Berber language, Tarifit, apart from in its southwestern corner, where another non-Zenati Northern Berber language, Senhaji, may be distinguished. While such a description is well-founded as far as it goes, it often represents a great oversimplification, as Mena Lafkioui's work reveals. Historical linguists looking at innovations within Berber, typologists examining diversity, syntacticians looking at microvariation, anthropologists seeking to trace migrations - all will benefit greatly from this work, which makes it both possible and imperative to resist the temptation to say “Tarifit does so-and-so” in favour of a more nuanced account of variation within the Rif. Even many elements commonly thought of as characteristic of the Rif, such as the sound change l > r, are revealed to be in truth characteristics of a particular central area within the Rif, with older forms still conserved along the outskirts, or to be just a particular case within a large array of forms. ERDownload
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Full Metadata
| Bibliographisches Zitat | Afrikanistik Online, Vol. 2007, Iss. 4 |
|---|---|
| Titel |
Mena Lafkioui. 2007. Atlas linguistique des variétés berbères (eng) |
| Autor | Lameen Souag |
| Sprache | eng |
| Zusammenfassung | In the mountainous landscape of northeastern Morocco, a fairly large geographically contiguous Berber-speaking area with a few million inhabitants is to be found, called the Rif. Its people are generally described as speaking a single Zenati Northern Berber language, Tarifit, apart from in its southwestern corner, where another non-Zenati Northern Berber language, Senhaji, may be distinguished. While such a description is well-founded as far as it goes, it often represents a great oversimplification, as Mena Lafkioui's work reveals. Historical linguists looking at innovations within Berber, typologists examining diversity, syntacticians looking at microvariation, anthropologists seeking to trace migrations - all will benefit greatly from this work, which makes it both possible and imperative to resist the temptation to say “Tarifit does so-and-so” in favour of a more nuanced account of variation within the Rif. Even many elements commonly thought of as characteristic of the Rif, such as the sound change l > r, are revealed to be in truth characteristics of a particular central area within the Rif, with older forms still conserved along the outskirts, or to be just a particular case within a large array of forms. |
| Freie Schlagworte | Berber, Morocco, Rif |
| Normierte Schlagworte |
|
| DDC | 490 |
| Rechte | DPPL |
| URN: | urn:nbn:de:0009-10-11900 |