WAEC offline past questions - with all answers and explanations in one app - Download for free
WAEC May/June 2024 - Practice for Objective & Theory - From 1988 till date, download app now - 99995

Grammatical Analysis Of Nominative Cases In Al-Asmac Īyāt

Type Project Topics (docx)
Faculty Arts & Humanities
Course Arabic and Islamic Studies
Price ₦6,000
Buy Now
Key Features:
No. of pages: 158
WAEC May/June 2024 - Practice for Objective & Theory - From 1988 till date, download app now - 99995
WAEC Past Questions, Objective & Theory, Study 100% offline, Download app now - 24709
WAEC offline past questions - with all answers and explanations in one app - Download for free
Abstract:
The thesis investigated the nature of nominative cases in al-asmac īyāt, a legend Arabic anthology compiled by the renowned Islamic scholar cAbū Sac īd cAbd al-Malik bin Qurayb mostly referred to as al-Asmac īyī (d. 828 AD). The collection is considered as one of the fundamental sources of Arabic language and is extensively cited by Arabic linguists, philologists, and literary critics. The main objective of the study was to establish the centrality of nominative cases in Arabic language and to divulge its types and characteristics in al-asmac īyāt. The study adopted a descriptive linguistic approach, which entails the compilation and organization of linguistic data, and analyzing them appropriately in order to arrive at the findings that may shed some light on the grammatical rules in relation to nominative cases.

The researcher also relied on classical and modern sources of Arabic books which discussed nominative cases in detail. The study among others made the following findings: The most reoccurring nominative case was the agent (fāc īl) found in verbal sentences. This seems to be in order, considering that every verb, be it transitive or intransitive, comes with the agent (fāc īl). As well, the subject (al-mubtada’) of nominal sentences featured substantively in the collection. This is equally understandable, as the nominal sentence is the only substitute for the construction of sentences in Arabic. Worthy of attention is the variations associated with the occurrence of the subject of nominal sentences; in some cases, it precedes the predicate, and sometimes it succeeds the predicate. In both instances among others, the necessary conditions were met. The predicate of the nominal cases also featured substantively as nominative cases as well. This was expected because the predicate completes the sense conveyed by the subject. Here again, the predicate is either situated after or before the subject, and the conditions pertaining to each have also been fulfilled.
Buy Now
 
WAEC Past Questions, Objective & Theory, Study 100% offline, Download app now - 24709
WAEC offline past questions - with all answers and explanations in one app - Download for free
Post-UTME Past Questions - Original materials are available here - Download PDF for your school of choice + 1 year SMS alerts
WAEC May/June 2024 - Practice for Objective & Theory - From 1988 till date, download app now - 99995