Northwest Arabian Arabic

Northwest Arabian Arabic (also called Levantine Bedawi Arabic or Eastern Egyptian Bedawi Arabic) is a proposed subfamily of Arabic encompassing the traditional Bedouin dialects of the Sinai Peninsula, the Negev, Gaza Strip, southern Jordan, and the northwestern corner of Saudi Arabia.

The dialect of the Maʿāzah in the Egyptian Eastern Desert borders the dialect of the ʿAbābdah, who speak a dialect more closely related to Sudanese Arabic. Research is needed to establish whether the Maʿāzah dialect is the southwestern extremity of Northwest Arabian on the Egyptian mainland.

In Saudi Arabia, the dialects of the eastern coast of the Gulf of Aqaba, the Hisma, and the Harrat al-Riha belong to the Northwest Arabian type, but the dialect of the Bili to the south is not closely related.

Classification
The Northwest Arabian Arabic dialects display several innovations from Proto-Arabic:


 * 1) The voiced reflex of *q ([g])
 * 2) The gaháwah syndrome: insertion of /a/ after X in (C)aXC(V) sequences where X is /h/, /ʿ/, /ḥ/, /ġ/, or /ḫ/, e.g. gahwa(h) > gaháwa(h) "coffee", baġl > baġal "mule".
 * 3) The definite article al- and the relative pronoun alli are stressable as an integral part of the word, e.g. álwalad, áljabal. The initial /a/ is stable enough to be preserved after -ī (-iy), which is dropped: f-albēt, rāʿ-álġanam.
 * 4) A number of typical Bedouin lexical items (gōṭar "to go", sōlaf "to tell, narrate", ṭabb "to arrive", nišad ~ nišád "to ask").
 * 5) Absence of tanwīn and its residues.
 * 6) Absence of final /n/ in the imperfect, 2nd person feminine singular, 2nd person masculine plural, and 3rd person masculine plural.
 * 7) The pronominal suffix of the 2nd person masculine plural is -ku (-kuw).
 * 8) Stressed variants -ī and -nī of the pronominal suffix in the 1st person singular.
 * 9) Plural comm. forms haḏalla, haḏallāk, etc.
 * 10) Initial /a/ in Forms VII, VIII, and X in the perfect, and stressed when in stressable position.
 * 11) Initial /a/ in a number of irregular nouns (amm, aḫt, aḫwan, adēn, afám).

Varieties
Northwest Arabian Arabic can be divided into a western branch spoken in Sinai and the Negev, and an eastern branch spoken to the east of the Wadi Araba. Several dialects of the eastern branch, such as that of the Zalabiah and Zawaidih of Wadi Ramm, and that of the Bdul, have been argued to be closely related to the western branch.

Consonants

 * Phonemes in parentheses occur either marginally or across different dialects


 * can be heard as an allophone of.


 * is mostly heard in the Hindiy and Ṭuwara dialects

Vowels
Vowels occur in both long and short positions:

Vowels are recognized as allophones in the following positions:

Word-internal imala of */-ā-/
Some varieties of Negev Arabic are characterized by word-internal imala of *-ā- to /ē/ in patterns where /i/ historically occurred in an adjacent syllable. It does not occur when one of the adjacent consonants is emphatic or a back consonant. Some of the patterns where it is found include the following:

Similar raising is found in the Bdul dialect of Jordan: minǣsif “mansaf (pl.)”, hǣḏi “this (f.)”, ḏ̣aygǣt “narrow (pl.)”, iblǣdna “our land”.
 * Reflexes of *CāCiC: šēyib “elder, old man”, ḥēmiy “hot”, gēyil “having said”, bēkir “morning”, wēḥid “one”, ṯēniy “second”
 * Reflexes of *CiCāC(ah): srēǧ “oil lamp”, ktēbih “writing”
 * Reflexes of *miCCāC(ah): miftēḥ “key”, miknēsih “broom”
 * Broken plurals *CaCāCiC: gibēyil “tribes”, šinētiy “bags”
 * Imperfect *yuCāCiC: ysēwiy “it equals”, yǧēwib “he replies”

Word-final imala of */-ā(ʾ)/
Some of the western dialects of Northwest Arabian Arabic (Central Sinai and Negev in particular) are characterized by an Imala of Old Arabic word-final *-ā(ʾ) to /iy/ in certain patterns of nouns and adjectives. Emphatics seem to block the shift. The following examples are from Negev Arabic:

In the dialects of southern Sinai, word-final imala typically results in /iʾ/. Some examples are íštiʾ “winter”, ǧiʾ “he came”, ḏiʾ “this, these”, tižibhiʾ “you get it”, ifṭarniʾ “we had breakfast”. In some, but not all groups, /a/ in a previous syllable blocks this imala. Like the dialects of central Sinai and Negev, the imala of feminine adjectives of color and defect on the pattern CaCCāʾ results in stressed /íy/: sōdíy “black; bad”.
 * Reflexes of *CiCāʾ, *CuCāʾ: štiy “rainy season”, ḥḏiy “footwear”, dʿiy “cursing”, ndiy “call”, zniy “adultery”, ġniy “song”, ʿšiy “evening prayer”, dliy “pails (pl.)”, mliy “full (pl.)”, rwiy “well-watered (pl.)”, miy “water”
 * Reflexes of *CiCā, *CuCā: lḥiy “beards”, griy “hospitality”, hdiy “right guidance”, hniy “here”
 * Reflexes of *CiCCā(ʾ), *CuCCā(ʾ): yimniy “right side”, yisriy “left side”, sifliy “nether millstone”, ʿilyiy “upper millstone”, miʿziy “goats”, ḥimmiy “fever”, ḥinniy “henna”, juwwiy “inside”, ḥiffiy “barefoot (pl.)”, mūsiy “Moses”, ʿīsiy “Jesus”
 * Feminine adjective *CaCCāʾ: sawdíy “black”, ṭaršíy “deaf”, tarjíy “sloping downwards (ground)”, šahabíy “grey, light blue”, ḥawwíy “salt-and-pepper, black with white spots (animal)”, zargíy “blue”, ʿawjíy “crooked”, šadfíy “left-handed, left”, ḥawlíy “cross-eyed”, safʿíy “black-eared (goat)”
 * Broken plural *CaCCā: nōmiy “asleep (pl.)”, mōtiy ~ máwtiy “dead (pl.)”

Characteristics
The following are some archaic features retained from Proto-Arabic:


 * 1) Gender distinction in the 2nd and 3rd person plural pronouns, pronominal suffixes, and finite verbal forms.
 * 2) Productivity of Form IV (aC1C2aC3, yiC1C2iC3).
 * 3) The initial /a/ in the definite article al- and the relative pronoun alli.
 * 4) Frequent and productive use of diminutives (glayyil "a little", ḫbayz "bread").
 * 5) Absence of affricated variants of /g/ (< */q/) and /k/.
 * 6) The use of the locative preposition fi (fiy).
 * 7) The invariable pronominal suffix -ki of the 2nd person feminine singular.