Alresaini, Sami Saleh (2012) Acquisition of modern standard Arabic by speakers of different Arabic colloquial varieties. PhD thesis, University of York.
Abstract
This thesis conducts an empirical investigation of Arabic speakers' underlying ultimate 
knowledge of Modern Standard Arabic (MSA). The goal is to determine whether these 
speakers' end-state MSA grammar can be classed as a native language (L I) type grammar or 
a second language (L2) type grammar. The motivation for this research comes from the 
frequent claim in the literature that there are no native speakers of MSA (e.g., Kaye, 1970; 
Maamouri, 1998). This claim has been made because MSA is not spoken at home and it is 
acquired through literacy and formal schooling which does not start for most children until 
age 5 or 6. Another factor that can support such a claim is that children who start acquiring 
MSA at school already speak their colloquial varieties which were acquired naturally from 
birth. Because there are differences between the colloquial varieties and MSA in all 
linguistic domains (e.g., Altoma, 1969; Ayari, 1996; Maamouri, 1998), this has been 
assumed to have possibly affected the ultimate attainment of MSA and resulted in different 
end-state grammars; a characteristic of a second language. However, the claim that there are 
no native speakers of MSA has not been investigated empirically. In fact, there is a clear 
scarcity of empirical works in the literature that investigate and discuss Arabic speakers' 
end-state underlying knowledge of MSA. The current thesis aims to fill in this gap. 
The current research examines the impact of age of first exposure (AoE) and knowledge of 
the previously acquired dialect (L I) on the ultimate attainment of MSA acquired by Arabs 
across three regions of the Arabic-speaking world: Egypt, the Levant and the Gulf regions. 
The main objective is to explore how MSA's end-state underlying grammar is represented 
by native speakers of different colloquial varieties whose first exposure to MSA also varied 
between exceptionally 'early' exposure (from age two or three in MSA immersion nurseries 
and kindergartens) and typically 'late' exposure to MSA (from age five or six in normal 
primary schools). Based on results of a corpus study of colloquial varieties, the syntactic 
variables for investigation were identified as: i) resumption in definite object relative 
clauses, ii) collective subject-verb agreement in SV sentences, and iii) word order preference 
in conversational and narrative contexts. 
147 adolescent participants were recruited to take part in an experiment designed to examine 
their underlying knowledge of the three syntactic phenomena in MSA. The participants 
completed two tasks: an acceptability judgement task and a conversation role-play task. 
Using ANOV A and planned comparisons, the differences in participants' performance in 
these tasks were evaluated across five groups corresponding to different AoE and the 
colloquial varieties the participants speak. The analysis of the data showed no significant 
effect of AoE or of the L1, and post hoc tests showed no significant differences between the 
groups of participants. These results were discussed in relation to previous views on L 1 
influence and effect of age of onset on the ultimate attainment of a second language. 
Uniform performance in the tasks of the study, despite variant AoE and LIs, was interpreted 
to indicate success of typical Arabic speakers in attaining a native-like competence in at least 
the three MSA syntactic phenomena investigated. Further research that involves 
investigation of end-state knowledge of more grammatical phenomena in different linguistic 
domains is required to make a comprehensive assessment of typical Arabic speakers' end- 
state knowledge of MSA.
Metadata
| Awarding institution: | University of York | 
|---|---|
| Academic Units: | The University of York > Language and Linguistic Science (York) | 
| Identification Number/EthosID: | uk.bl.ethos.583339 | 
| Depositing User: | EThOS Import (York) | 
| Date Deposited: | 24 Jul 2020 11:28 | 
| Last Modified: | 24 Jul 2020 11:28 | 
| Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:26197 | 
        
            You do not need to contact us to get a copy of this thesis. Please use the 'Download' link(s) above to get a copy.
          
        You can contact us about this thesis. If you need to make a general enquiry, please see the Contact us page.