The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship

This research aims at defining the concept of the sentence, its components, and types according to the Omani scholar Abdullah bin Humaid Al-Salimi (1913). Like most Arab grammarians, Al-Salimi concentrated on the syntactic level of the sentence without denying the semantic aspect. Al-Salimi adopted...

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Main Authors: Sameer Statiyyeh, Halah Al Abooshi
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Sultan Qaboos University 2015-01-01
Series:Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1074
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spelling doaj-fa1ccc45633c4d9081cffe4189f65e3e2020-11-25T00:48:23ZaraSultan Qaboos UniversityJournal of Arts and Social Sciences2312-12702522-22792015-01-016151310.24200/jass.vol6iss1pp5-131023The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical ScholarshipSameer Statiyyeh0Halah Al Abooshi1Sultan Qaboos University, OmanSultan Qaboos University, OmanThis research aims at defining the concept of the sentence, its components, and types according to the Omani scholar Abdullah bin Humaid Al-Salimi (1913). Like most Arab grammarians, Al-Salimi concentrated on the syntactic level of the sentence without denying the semantic aspect. Al-Salimi adopted the traditional grammatical concept of the sentence. According to Arab grammarians, the sentence is the minimum structure that makes sense. It consists of two main factors: the subject and object. This concept makes problems when applied to the relative clause and the first part of the conditional clause. Both conditional and relative clauses consist of two elements, i.e. subject and object but they do not make complete meaning. Like traditional grammarians, Al-Salimi divided the sentence according to initiation and implication. Initiation is when the sentence starts with a noun, then it will be classified as a nominal sentence; otherwise it will be considered a verbal sentence. Implication is when the small sentence is implied in the big sentence. This research arrived at some findings which include the following results: 1-Al-Salimi was a traditional grammarian but he had some innovative ideas. 2-Al-Salimi’s approach can be considered structural, but one that does not ignore semantic considerations. 3-The sentence classification in Salimi’s work is built on syntactic principles.https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1074Al-Salimi, the concept of the sentence, Syntactic and Semantic
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sameer Statiyyeh
Halah Al Abooshi
spellingShingle Sameer Statiyyeh
Halah Al Abooshi
The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship
Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Al-Salimi, the concept of the sentence, Syntactic and Semantic
author_facet Sameer Statiyyeh
Halah Al Abooshi
author_sort Sameer Statiyyeh
title The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship
title_short The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship
title_full The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship
title_fullStr The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship
title_full_unstemmed The Sentence in Its Syntactic and Semantic Aspects in Al-Salimi’s Grammatical Scholarship
title_sort sentence in its syntactic and semantic aspects in al-salimi’s grammatical scholarship
publisher Sultan Qaboos University
series Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
issn 2312-1270
2522-2279
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This research aims at defining the concept of the sentence, its components, and types according to the Omani scholar Abdullah bin Humaid Al-Salimi (1913). Like most Arab grammarians, Al-Salimi concentrated on the syntactic level of the sentence without denying the semantic aspect. Al-Salimi adopted the traditional grammatical concept of the sentence. According to Arab grammarians, the sentence is the minimum structure that makes sense. It consists of two main factors: the subject and object. This concept makes problems when applied to the relative clause and the first part of the conditional clause. Both conditional and relative clauses consist of two elements, i.e. subject and object but they do not make complete meaning. Like traditional grammarians, Al-Salimi divided the sentence according to initiation and implication. Initiation is when the sentence starts with a noun, then it will be classified as a nominal sentence; otherwise it will be considered a verbal sentence. Implication is when the small sentence is implied in the big sentence. This research arrived at some findings which include the following results: 1-Al-Salimi was a traditional grammarian but he had some innovative ideas. 2-Al-Salimi’s approach can be considered structural, but one that does not ignore semantic considerations. 3-The sentence classification in Salimi’s work is built on syntactic principles.
topic Al-Salimi, the concept of the sentence, Syntactic and Semantic
url https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/1074
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