The Term "al-fiʿl al-mutaʿaddī bi-ḥarf jarr" (lit. “the verb which ‘passes over’ through a preposition”) in Medieval Arabic Grammatical Tradition
Author(s) -
Almog Kasher
Publication year - 1970
Publication title -
journal of arabic and islamic studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0806-198X
DOI - 10.5617/jais.4630
Subject(s) - verb , term (time) , arabic , linguistics , scholarship , philosophy , subcategory , epistemology , literature , mathematics , art , pure mathematics , physics , political science , law , quantum mechanics
Contrary to the categorization of verbs with regard to their taʿaddin which modern scholarship has customarily ascribed to the medieval Arab grammarians, the term al-fiʿl al-mutaʿaddī bi-ḥarf jarr is generally not regarded by these grammarians as a subcategory of al-fiʿl al-mutaʿaddī . Furthermore, Arab grammarians do not restrict the application of the term al-fiʿl al-mutaʿaddī bi-ḥarf jarr to constructions in which the prepopositions in question are governed; this has far-reaching repercussions on the notion of ẓarf . The grammarians’ conception of al-fiʿl al-mutaʿaddī bi-ḥarf jarr , surveyed in this article, is explained both against the backdrop of the early transformations the term taʿaddin underwent, and within the grammarians’ general theoretical framework.
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