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Morphological units in the Arabic mental lexicon: evidence from an individual with deep dyslexia
Authors:Idrissi Ali  Kehayia Eva
Affiliation:Department of Linguistics, McGill University, Quebec Montreal, Canada H3A 1A7. ali.idrissi@eudoramail.com
Abstract:An ongoing debate in Arabic morphology concerns the nature of the smallest unit governing lexical organization and representation in this language. A standard model maintains that Arabic words are typically analyzable into a three-consonantal root morpheme carrying the core meaning of words and a prosodic template responsible mostly for grammatical information. This view has been largely supported by research in both theoretical linguistics and psycholinguistics. An alternative theory holds that the meaning of words in Arabic is, rather, encoded in the 'etymon' comprising two unordered consonants of the root only. Results from a recent priming experiment have shown that the etymon induces strong morphological priming effects, supporting its morphological/lexical status. In this paper we present data from a patient with deep dyslexia questioning the role of the etymon as a psychologically real representational unit in Arabic and arguing, instead, for the central role of the root in both morphological and lexical representation in this language.
Keywords:Arabic   Roots   Etymons   Non-concatenative morphology   Speech errors   Deep dyslexia   Mental lexicon
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