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Reading in a root–based–morphology language: the case of Arabic
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2002
Year
Arabic Dialect LinguisticsMultilingualismArabic Morphological AnalysisLanguage DevelopmentArabic OrthographyPsycholinguisticsArabic LiteratureMorphology (Linguistics)PhonologyLanguage DocumentationArabicLanguage AcquisitionArabic Dialect OrthographyLanguage StudiesArabic ReadabilityArabic Syntactic AnalysisRoot–based–morphology LanguageMorphologyMental LexiconMorphological AnalysisReading ProcessArabic Dialect Morphological AnalysisOrthographyPhonology MorphologySentence ContextPhonicsLanguage ComprehensionForeign Language AcquisitionLinguistics
The reading process in Arabic as a function of vowels and sentence context is reviewed. Reading accuracy and reading comprehension results are reviewed in the light of cross–cultural reading, in order to develop a more comprehensive reading theory. Phonology, morphology and sentence context are considered key variables in explaining the reading process in Arabic orthography. Phonology (in the form of short vowels) affects reading accuracy as well as reading comprehension, regardless of reading level, age, material and reading conditions. Initial visual–orthographic processing identifies the morphology (i.e. the triliteral/quadriliteral roots of Arabic words) which then enables access to the mental lexicon. Sentence context is also essential in reading Arabic orthography regardless of the reader’s level, age, material and reading condition. The phonology, morphology and sentence context of Arabic are presented in two suggested reading models for poor/beginner Arabic readers and for skilled Arabic readers.