Murtaza Hussain pfp
Murtaza Hussain
@mazmhussain
I’m amazed that people in Arab countries still find the same language mutually intelligible. I’ve found that not only does almost every single country have a significantly different dialect, even sub-state regions and cities have material linguistic differences. On top of that the Arabic taught in schools, written in books, and utilized on news broadcasts is completely different from what anyone actually speaks. This fragmentation shows that Arabic is gradually following the path of Latin, which gradually broke up across generations into the various Romance languages that we see today in Europe. In the future we might expect to see Egyptian, Saudi, Moroccan, and Syrian all evolve into separate languages, albeit with a shared origin. For the time being the conceit continues that this is all one language, but that is becoming less true everyday.
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Amara
@amaraxo
You've captured the essence of how Arabic is evolving. Despite the growing differences in dialects, it's amazing how they still connect through a shared history, though it’s possible we might see them become distinct languages in the future.
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Snibb123.eth pfp
Snibb123.eth
@snibb123
I wonder if Islam also helps to keep these linkages alive? Like Latin and Christianity.
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Shoaib
@psydeffects
It become a distinct languages is difficult....we will have different dialect colloquial alltogether but arbaic in its essence will always stays the same!!
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