Western Egyptian Bedawi Arabic Explained

Western Egyptian Bedawi Arabic
Also Known As:Sahil Maryut Bedouin Arabic
Sulaimitian Arabic
States:Egypt
Region:Alexandria, Beheira, Matrouh, Beni Suef, Cairo, Egypt–Libya border
Date:2021
Ref:e26
Speakers Label:Speakers
Familycolor:Afro-Asiatic
Fam2:Semitic
Fam3:West Semitic
Fam4:Central Semitic
Fam5:Arabic
Fam6:Maghrebi Arabic
Fam7:Libyan Arabic
Script:Arabic alphabet
Glotto:west2774
Iso3:ayl
Iso3comment:included in [ayl]

Western Egyptian Bedawi Arabic, also known as Sahil Maryut Bedouin Arabic, is a group of Bedouin Arabic dialects spoken in Western Egypt along the Mediterranean coast, west to the Egypt–Libya border. Ethnologue and Glottolog classify Western Egyptian Bedawi Arabic as a Libyan Arabic dialect.[1]

This variety is spoken by the Awlad Ali tribe, who settled in the edges of Lake Maryut and west of Bihera beginning in the 17th century from the region of Jebel Akhdar (Libya). It is also spoken in Wadi El Natrun. Their dialect is phonologically, morphophonemically and morphologically closer to the Peninsular Bedouin dialects than to the adjacent Egyptian dialects. Egyptian Arabic speakers from other parts of Egypt do not understand the Awlad Ali dialect.

Western Bedouin dialects influenced the dialects of southern Upper Egypt between Asyut and Idfu, and those of the Bahariyya Oasis and Bihera.

Classification

The dialects spoken in Matruh province as well as in eastern Libya have been traditionally classified as belonging to the Sulaymi Bedouin dialects, characterized by a /g/ reflex of Qāf, the gahawa-syndrome, and feminine plural conjugations and pronouns.[2] However, the classification of North African Bedouin dialects into Hilalian, Sulaimitian, and Ma’qilian groups is not uncontroversial, and is based primarily on socio-historical and geographical considerations.[3] [4] While the dialects of Tripolitania represent a continuation of Tunisian dialects, the dialects of Cyrenaica show affinities with Eastern Bedouin dialects, especially with regards to the gahawa-syndrome and syllable structure.

Phonology

! rowspan="2"
LabialInterdentalDental/AlveolarPalatalVelarPharyngealGlottal
plainemph.plainemph.
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Stopvoicelesspronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
voicedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Fricativevoicelesspronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
voicedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Tap/Trillpronounced as /link/
Approximantpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Notes:
Vowels!!Front!Central!Back
Closepronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Midpronounced as /link/
Openpronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/

Grammar

Pronouns

Contrary to MSA, Western Egyptian Bedawi uses the plural pronouns for dual pronouns:

!Singular!Plural
1st person (m/f), nābīdiiḥna, niḥna
2nd personminitintu
fintiintan
3rd personmhəm
fhin
The following direct object pronominal suffixes are attached to verbs:
!Singular!Plural
1st person (m/f)-ni-na
2nd personm-ak-kam
f-ik-kan
3rd personm-ih, -ah (near emphatics)-həm ~ -ham
f-ha-hin ~ -hən
The following demonstrative pronouns are used. The form hāḏ̣ayīəhi is also used with the suffix -yīəhi:
!Singular!Plural
Proximal(this, these)mhāḏ̣ahāḏowl
fhāḏihāḏeyn
Distal(that, those)mhāḏ̣ākhāḏ̣alówk
fhāḏīkhāḏ̣alák
The following interrogative pronouns are used:
Interrogative pronouns!Arabic!English
eyšwhat
leyšwhy
eymíttawhen
weynwhere
keyf, eyšinhū, eyšinhīhow

Verbs

Perfect

There are two types of strong perfect stems, CiCáC (a-type) and CCiC (i-type). Examples of a-type perfects are misák, nizál, ṭiláʿ, fihám. Examples of i-type perfects are šrib, rkib, zʿil, smiʿ, ʿrif, gdir, kbir, kṯir, tʿib, lbis, ybis.

Some perfect conjugations are shown below:

Basew/ Object Suffixes
3rd person sg.mmisák
fmsíkatmsikīət-ih, msikát-ta
3rd person pl.mmsíkaw
fmsíkanmsikánn-ih

Imperfect

There are three types of strong imperfect stems, CCiC (i-type), CCəC (ə-type), and CCaC (a-type). The vowel of the conjugation prefix harmonizes with the vowel of the stem: yiktib, yərgəd, yašṛab. The conjugation of the 1st person follows the niktib-níkitbu paradigm.

Influence

Bihera

The pronunciation [ʒ] for ǧīm occurs in the west of the Bihera, were Awlad Ali settled. Metathesized forms such as mašzid “mosque” may be a result of the influence of their dialect.

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Glottolog 4.7 - Western Egyptian Bedawi Arabic . 2023-01-01 . glottolog.org.
  2. Souag . Lameen . 2009 . Siwa and its significance for Arabic dialectology . Zeitschrift für Arabische Linguistik . 51 . 51–75 . 43525858 . 0170-026X.
  3. Taine-Cheikh . Catherine . 2017 . La classification des parlers bédouins du Maghreb : revisiter le classement traditionnel . Tunisian and Libyan Arabic Dialects: Common Trends - Recent Developments - Diachronic Aspects. fr.
  4. Benkato . Adam . 2019-12-13 . From Medieval Tribes to Modern Dialects: on the Afterlives of Colonial Knowledge in Arabic Dialectology . Philological Encounters . 4 . 1–2 . 2–25 . 10.1163/24519197-12340061 . 213987414 . 2451-9197. subscription .