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Sudanese Arabic information


Sudanese Arabic
لهجة سودانية
Pronunciation[ˈlahɟa suːˈdaːnijja]
Native toSudan, South Sudan, Eritrea[1]
RegionGezira, Khartoum, Anseba, Gash-Barka
EthnicitySudanese Arabs
SpeakersL1: 37 million (2022)[2]
L2: 11 million (2022)[2]
Total: 48 million (2022)[2]
Language family
Afro-Asiatic
  • Semitic
    • West Semitic
      • Central Semitic
        • Arabic
          • Sudanese Arabic
Writing system
Arabic alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3apd
Glottologsuda1236
[image reference needed]
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Sudanese Arabic, also referred to as the Sudanese dialect (Arabic: لهجة سودانية, romanized: Lahjat Sūdānīyah, Sudanese Arabic [ˈlahɟa suːˈdaːnijja]), Colloquial Sudanese (Arabic: عامية سودانية [ˈʕaːmmijja suːˈdaːnijja]) or locally as Common Sudanese (Arabic: دارجى [ˈdaːriɟi]) refers to the various related varieties of Arabic spoken in Sudan as well as parts of Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Chad. Sudanese Arabic has also influenced a number of Arabic-based pidgins and creoles, including Juba Arabic, widely used in South Sudan, as well as Ki-Nubi, spoken by the Nubi communities of Kenya and Uganda.

Sudanese Arabic is highly diverse. Famed Sudanese linguist Awn ash-Sharif Gasim noted that "it is difficult to speak of a 'Sudanese colloquial language' in general, simply because there is not a single dialect used simultaneously in all the regions where Arabic is the mother tongue. Every region, and almost every tribe, has its own brand of Arabic."[3] However, Gasim broadly distinguishes between the varieties spoken by sedentary groups along the Nile (such as the Ja'aliyyin) and pastoralist groups (such as the Baggara groups of west Sudan).[4] The most widely-spoken variety of Sudanese is variably referred to as Central Sudanese Arabic, Central Urban Sudanese Arabic, or Khartoum Arabic,[5] which more closely resembles varieties spoken by sedentary groups. Some, like researcher Stefano Manfredi, refer to this variety as "Sudanese Standard Arabic" due to the variety's comparative prestige and widespread use.[6] Linguist Ibrahim Adam Ishaq identifies two varieties of Arabic spoken in Darfur besides Sudanese Standard Arabic, including Pastoral Arabic and what is generally termed Darfur Arabic, which refers to the Arabic primarily spoken by multilingual Darfuris living in rural parts of the region.[7] A number of especially distinct tribal varieties, such as the Arabic spoken by the Shaigiya and Shukriyya tribes, have also elicited special interest from linguists.

The variety evolved from the varieties of Arabic brought by Arabs who migrated to the region after the signing of the Treaty of Baqt, a 7th-century treaty between the Muslim rulers of Egypt and the Nubian kingdom of Makuria. Testimonies by travelers to the areas that would become modern-day Sudan, like Ibn Battuta, indicate that Arabic coexisted alongside indigenous Sudanese languages, with multilingualism in Arabic and non-Arabic Sudanese languages being well-attested by travelers to the region up until the 19th-century.[8][9] Sudanese Arabic has characteristics similar to Egyptian Arabic. As a point of difference, though, the Sudanese dialect retains some archaic pronunciation patterns, such as the letter ج, and it also exhibits characteristics of the ancient Nobiin language that once covered the region.[10] Accordingly, linguists have identified a variety of influences from Nubian, Beja, Fur, Nilotic, and other Sudanese languages on the vocabulary and phonology of Sudanese Arabic.[4]

By the 16th and 17th centuries, the Sultanates of Darfur and Sennar emerged and adopted Arabic as an official language, employing the language in public documents and as an intermediary language between the myriad of languages spoken at the time.[8] Under the Sultanate of Sennar, Arabic was also employed in the writing of historical and theological books, most famously The Tabaqat of the Walis, the Righteous, the 'Ulema and the Poets in the Sudan (Arabic: كتاب الطبقات في خصوص الاولياء والصالحين والعلماء والشعراء في السودان) by Muhammad wad Dayf Allah. While the written Arabic used in these Sultanates more closely resembles the norms of Classical Arabic, Dayf Allah's book features early attestations of some elements of modern Sudanese phonology and syntax.[11]

Like other varieties of Arabic outside of Modern Standard Arabic, Sudanese Arabic is typically not used in formal writing or on Sudanese news channels. However, Sudanese Arabic is employed extensively on social media and various genres of Sudanese poetry (such as dobeyt and halamanteesh), as well as in Sudanese cinema and television.

  1. ^ "Arabic, Sudanese Spoken".
  2. ^ a b c Sudanese Arabic at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024) Closed access icon
  3. ^ Gasim., Awn Al-Sharif (1965). Some aspects of Sudanese colloquial Arabic. OCLC 772550469.
  4. ^ a b قاسم, عون الشريف (1984). قاموس اللهجة العامية في السودان. المكتب المصري الحديث.
  5. ^ Dickins, James (2007). Sudanese Arabic : phonematics and syllable structure. Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-05519-2. OCLC 912621449.
  6. ^ Roset, Caroline. A grammar of Darfur Arabic. OCLC 1037340906.
  7. ^ ابراهيم آدم إسحاق. 2002. الأصول العربية للهجة دارفور العامية (القروية). كلية اللغة العربية, قسم اللسانيات, جامعة ام درمان الإسلامية.
  8. ^ a b O'Fahey R. S. & Spaulding J. (1974). Kingdoms of the sudan. Methuen ; Distributed by Harper & Row Barnes & Noble Import Division. Retrieved August 27, 2022 from https://books.google.com/books?id=7h-QAAAAIAAJ .
  9. ^ Hassan Y. F. (1967). The Arabs and the Sudan: from the seventh to the early sixteenth century. Edinburgh U.P.
  10. ^ Multilingual Connections. "One Thousand and One Dialects: On the different Dialects of Arabic". Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  11. ^ Hamad, Bushra Jarir. Wad Dayf Allah as a historian: Analytical, literary and linguistic study of "Kitab at-Tabaqat". The University of Texas at Austin ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1992. 9225590.

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