Saudi Cultural Missions Theses & Dissertations

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    The Ianguage Attitudes of Saudi Arabic Speakers Towards the Speech of Other Major Vernacular Varieties of Arabic
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2025-03-03) Albogami, Haitham; Griffiths, Mark
    Language attitudes research in Saudi Arabia is in its early stages, and rarely goes beyond the boundaries of Saudi Arabia. There remains a gap in our knowledge of Saudis' attitudes towards non-Saudi dialects. This study examines Saudi Arabic speakers’ attitudes toward the speech of five major vernacular varieties of Arabic: Gulf, Iraqi, Levantine, Egyptian, and Maghrebi. The findings revealed a clear hierarchy of attitudes. Gulf Arabic was rated the highest across most labels, while Maghrebi Arabic was the lowest. Iraqi, Levantine and Egyptian competed in the middle spots, with an association of humour and closeness to MSA with Egyptian and Levantine Arabic respectively. Using a verbal guise technique (VGT) combined with a semantic differential scale and ranking tasks, this study collected and analysed quantitative and qualitative data from Saudi participants. The results suggested that attitudes toward these dialects are influenced by a combination of linguistic, sociopolitical, and cultural factors. Exploratory Factor Analyses were conducted on the five speakers, revealing five different dimensional models. These factor structures uncovered patterns of attitudes, offering a deeper look into stereotypes associated with the five varieties. By integrating culture-specific constructs (e.g., Sadr al-Majlis as a social status indicator), this study highlights the need for culture-appropriate instruments in language attitudes research. The findings highlight how media, cultural proximity, and stereotypes shape these attitudes.
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    A comprehensive study of vowel production and perception in two Arabic dialects: Joufy and Qatifi
    (university of York, 2024) Alenezy, Hajar; Hellmuth, Sam
    The thesis investigates the vowel system in two Saudi Arabic dialects: Qatifi and Joufy. It comprises three studies: two production studies and one perception study. The production studies report on the acoustic features of each phonological vowel system and they also investigate a putative merger in Qatifi short high vowels [i~u] and a putative split in Joufy low vowels [a(ː)/ɑ(ː)]. Meanwhile, the perception study examines how vowel spectral and temporal cues affect Qatifi and Joufy listeners’ perception of the duration contrast of vowel pairs. Analysis of scripted and unscripted texts reveals that short and long vowels differ in their temporal and spectral aspects, forming eight distinctive vowel categories in both dialects. The Qatifi vowel merger between /u/ and /i/ shows no absolute merger when the acoustic categories’ overlap was quantified using the Pillai score. With regards to Joufy low vowels [a(ː)/ɑ(ː)], there appears to be a split in progress that seems to be conditioned in the synchronic data by multiple triggering consonantal contexts, which include uvulars and the co-occurrence of [l] and [ɡ]. However, these observed environments are inconsistent, and many examples show no patterns, so /ɑ(:)/ might be better described as phonemic, especially because they form minimal and near- minimal pairs. The results also suggest that morphological structure and lexical item type may play a role in the spread of this putative sound change. The perception study examines how vowel spectral and temporal cues affect Qatifi and Joufy listeners’ perception of the duration contrast of vowel pairs. The findings provide additional evidence that cue weighting in vowel perception is vowel-dependent. Individual vowel position and acoustic features play a role in how listeners use spectral and temporal cues. In the overall performance, temporal cues were more attended to than spectral cues by listeners of both dialects. High vowels exhibit greater sensitivity to spectral cues than low vowels, with variations observed between front-back high vowels and also between the two dialects.
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    A Grammar of Alnamas Arabic
    (The University at Buffalo, 2024-12-17) Alamri, Mohammed; Good, Jeff
    This dissertation is a grammar of Alnamas Arabic, an endangered variety of Arabic spoken predominantly by an estimated 4,800 individuals from the older parent and grandparent generations in the Alnamas region of southwestern Saudi Arabia. The dialect is part of the southwestern Arabic dialect group and exhibits distinctive linguistic features that set it apart from other varieties of Arabic. This grammar is based on the author’s fieldwork, which included recording and analyzing speech from native speakers in Alnamas. Since Alnamas Arabic has remained largely unstudied, this research provides the first major documentation and description of the dialect, offering a comprehensive analysis of its phonology, morphology, and syntax.
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    An Acoustic and Perceptual Study of Interconsonantal Short Vowel Deletion in First Syllables of Najdi Arabic
    (University of Reading, 2024-07-26) Alsabhan, Rana; Setter, Jane
    The process of short vowel deletion in open syllables word initially is attested in many Arabic dialects, such as Moroccan Arabic (Shaw et al., 2009), Omani Arabic (Al-Balushi, 2016), Jordanian Arabic (Bani-Yasin & Owens, 1987), San’ani Arabic (Watson, 2002), and Najdi Arabic (Ingham, 1994). The constraints that have been discussed so far which account for this deletion are attributed to stress (Bobaker, 2019; Watson, 2011) and syllable structure (Broselow, 2018; Kiparsky, 2003). It is widely agreed that short vowels are deleted in unstressed open syllables where the deletion does not result in a sequence of more than two consonants (Bani-Yasin & Owens, 1987). Few studies, if any, have examined the impact of the phonological features of the neighbouring consonants on this deletion. This thesis aimed to fill up this knowledge gap by exploring the effect of the phonological features on the deletion of short vowels in first syllables in Najdi Arabic from production and perception perspectives. Forty-five Najdi Arabic native speakers (31 females, 14 males) were recruited to do three production tasks: diapix, reading, and shadowing tasks to elicit various phonetic data that reflected different speech styles. The production data was acoustically analysed to confirm the deletion process. In addition, sixty-five Najdi Arabic native listeners (38 females, 27 males) were recruited to conduct an AX discrimination task, whereby listeners were asked to perceptually discriminate between two versions of the same word; one version with a vowel-presence and another with a vowel-absence. Both production and perception datasets were statistically analysed using mixed-effects logistic regression models to examine the effects of the phonological contexts on the deletion process. Results of the production data showed that male speakers significantly deleted first-syllable vowels more than female speakers and vowels were more likely to be deleted following a dorsal obstruent than a coronal one. The result of the perception experiment revealed that listeners’ perception was affected by three phonological factors. Listeners were more likely to detect vowel deletion following a dorsal obstruent more than those following a coronal one. Listeners were more likely to perceive vowel deletion in a front-to-back order more than those in a back-to front order. Lastly, front vowel deletion was more likely to be perceived than back vowel deletion. The manner of articulation of the obstruents did not play a role in the production tasks nor the perception task, short vowels were deleted in first syllables, regardless of the sonority value. These findings add to the phonological knowledge and understanding of the process of short vowel deletion in initial syllables in Najdi Arabic.
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    Intonational Variation on Saudi Dialects: a cross-dialectal corpus-based approach
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2023-10-03) Alzamil, Aljawharah Ibrahim; Hellmuth, Sam
    Intonational patterns have been shown to vary across Arabic dialects on a regional level. This thesis presents one of the first investigations of inter-dialectal intonational variation within a single Arabic-speaking country (Saudi Arabia). The aim of the thesis is to describe the prosodic realisation of yes/no questions (ynqs) and focus utterances in three urban Saudi dialects (Najdi, Hijazi, and Jizani) in a speech production corpus stratified by age and gender. Qualitative analysis of prosodic contours in ynqs from two speech styles showed two main findings: a dialectal difference in which ynqs are typically realised with one of two contours: a rise (Hijazi and Najdi) versus a rise-fall (Jizani), and a potential indication of dialectal change in which young Jizani speakers use more rises than older Jizani speakers. Quantitative analysis of the acoustic cues employed in prosodic marking of focus from two elicitation tasks found similar off-focus cues in both pre-focus and post-focus positions across dialects, but small dialectal differences in the type and degree of acoustic cues observed in onfocus positions; the Jizani speakers displayed less focus enhancement in subjects. Finally, qualitative analysis of non-prosodic focus-marking strategies (such as ellipsis) in data excluded from quantitative analysis due to disfluency, with comparison to data from unscripted portions of the speech corpus, revealed dialectal difference in use of syntactic focus marking strategies, which are used more by older Jizani speakers. From this first parallel description of two key features of three urban Saudi dialects, the thesis argues that the three patterns found in the results are not independent of each other, but due to a trade-off in the allocation available of prosodic strategies for marking of ynqs and marking of focus.
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