Academic literature on the topic 'Arabic novels'

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Journal articles on the topic "Arabic novels"

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Gutas, Dimitri. "On Graeco-Arabic Epistolary ‘Novels’." Middle Eastern Literatures 12, no. 1 (2009): 59–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14752620902760590.

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McManus, Anne-Marie E. "SCALE IN THE BALANCE: READING WITH THE INTERNATIONAL PRIZE FOR ARABIC FICTION (“THE ARABIC BOOKER”)." International Journal of Middle East Studies 48, no. 2 (2016): 217–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743816000039.

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AbstractThis article brings area studies approaches to Arabic novels into dialogue with world literature through a critical engagement with the International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF), commonly known as “the Arabic Booker.” This prize launches Arabic novels out of national fields and into a world marketplace whose reading practices have been shaped by the Anglophone postcolonial novel, canonized by the IPAF's mentor: the Booker Prize Foundation. Against this institutional backdrop, the article develops a scale-based method to revisit the intersection of postcolonial tropes and national e
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Taufiq Ahmad Dardiri, Moh Wakhid Hidayat, Sangidu, Fadlil Munawwar Manshur,. "PETA KAJIAN ATAS NOVEL SEJARAH ISLAM KARYA JURJĪ ZAIDĀN." Jurnal CMES 12, no. 1 (2019): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.20961/cmes.12.1.34867.

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The novel of Islamic history by Jurjī Zaidān is one of the works of Modern Arabic literature which appeared at the end of the 19th century. Since it was first published, as a serial story in al-Hilal magazine, this novel has been read and has received a great response. Zaidān composed 22 titles of novels from 1891 to 1914. After Zaidān's death in 1914, his novels were still read by the public, reprinted, and even translated in various languages in the world. Zaidān’s Islamic historical novels still exist, both within the scope of modern Arabic literature and in Arabic thought, with many studie
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G. Nasir, Kamal, and Shouq A. Afrawi. "Pragmatic Functions of English and Arabic Connectives in Selected Novels." International Journal of Linguistics 12, no. 2 (2020): 98. http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/ijl.v12i2.16681.

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This paper contains a contrastive study that reveals connectives from syntactic, semantic, pragmatic and discourse analytic perspectives to cover the whole levels and to provide a good deal of information about them. The study then confines to the analysis of the pragmatic functions of these connectives in two novels; an English one by John Steinbeck (East of Eden) and an Arabic one by Naguib Mahfouz (Palace of Desire) [qaṣr ãl shawq].The study focuses on connectives, their classifications and functions and sheds light on the notion of connectives from four different levels; syntactic, semanti
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Bashkin, Orit. "When the Safras Met the Dajānīs." Journal of Arabic Literature 47, no. 1-2 (2016): 138–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570064x-12341316.

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This paper explores how readers can hear Arabic voices within Hebrew novels written by Jews who came to Israel from Arab countries or who were born in Israel to Arabic-speaking parents.1 I look at the ways in which the Arabic language itself, as well as Arabic literature and Islamic religious texts, are mediated in these novels. The inclusion of Arabic voices within the Hebrew texts, I argue, acts powerfully against national monolingualism and generates a new understanding of Arab-Jewish relations and of Mizrahi Diasporic identities.
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Nazar, Shabana, and Abdul Rehman Saifee. "http://habibiaislamicus.com/index.php/hirj/article/view/147." Habibia Islamicus 4, no. 2 (2020): 59–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.47720/hi.2020.0402a04.

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The Life History of “ Jurji Zaydan ”, His Personality and His landmark services in the Arabic Language and its Literature generally and History of Islam and Arabic Literature particularly are enlightened in this paper. He was a famous Arab Historian, Author, Writer, Novelist, Journalist, Linguist and Interpreter of Modern Period. His works of Arabic History and Arabic Literature were revolutionary. He is a great Novelist in this Modern Period. He wrote several books on History of Islam & Arabic Literature and a series of Novels on Big personalities of Islam, which serve the purpose of a re
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Asaqli, Eisam, and Mariam Masalha. "PRISON SPACE IN ARABIC SCIENCE FICTION NOVELS." International Journal of Advanced Research 6, no. 5 (2018): 166–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/ijar01/7020.

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Al Saadi, Tania. "Three Arabic Novels Starting with a Crime." Middle Eastern Literatures 15, no. 1 (2012): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1475262x.2011.616715.

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Alluhaibi, Reyadh, Tareq Alfraidi, Mohammad A. R. Abdeen, and Ahmed Yatimi. "A Comparative Study of Arabic Part of Speech Taggers Using Literary Text Samples from Saudi Novels." Information 12, no. 12 (2021): 523. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/info12120523.

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Part of Speech (POS) tagging is one of the most common techniques used in natural language processing (NLP) applications and corpus linguistics. Various POS tagging tools have been developed for Arabic. These taggers differ in several aspects, such as in their modeling techniques, tag sets and training and testing data. In this paper we conduct a comparative study of five Arabic POS taggers, namely: Stanford Arabic, CAMeL Tools, Farasa, MADAMIRA and Arabic Linguistic Pipeline (ALP) which examine their performance using text samples from Saudi novels. The testing data has been extracted from di
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Awad, Yousef. "Football in Arabic literature in diaspora: Global influences and local manifestations." International Review for the Sociology of Sport 51, no. 8 (2016): 1005–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1012690214564630.

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This paper explores how Arab writers in diaspora present football in their literary works. Through an examination of Rabih Alameddine’s I, the Divine, Laila Lalami’s Secret Son and Leila Aboulela’s Lyrics Alley, the paper highlights the way in which Arab novelists in diaspora draw on the game’s international popularity to supplement and clarify the themes that these novels explore. Specifically, this paper investigates how the three novels portray the relationship between the individual and the nation and it suggests that these novels may be read within a context of a growing Arab involvement
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Arabic novels"

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Dhabab, Mansour M. A. "Representations of the Western other in early Arabic novels (1900-1915)." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2005. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/3883/.

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This thesis studies the image of the West in a selection of Arab novels that were published between 1900 and 1915, when the Arab world was in the early stages of Western occupation. It is an attempt to form a clear picture of how Arab writers of that period viewed the West and its civilisation, by studying the novels' characters during that time. First attempts to write Arab novels were closely connected to the depiction of the 'Other', i. e.: the Westerner, using this image to express their hopes and pains. The novels were timid messages addressed to the West, in the hope that it would recons
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Al-Malik, Ahmed Mukhtar Tweirsh. "The image of the other : representations of East-West encounters in Anglo-American and Arabic novels (1991-2001)." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/17839.

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The Second Gulf War (1990-1991) brought about huge transformations in the relationships between the Western and Arab world. The invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 and deployment of American-led Western troops in Saudi Arabia brought the Arab world to the top of the Western agenda. The presence of mostly non-Muslim Western troops in Saudi Arabia, which is home to the holy sites of Islamic people, triggered mixed reactions among Arab people and polarised their relationships with the West. These developments left a huge impact on literature and the shaping of the imagery of the Other in fiction. T
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Abualhassan, Amani Ahmed D. "Magical Realism in Saudi Novels Between the Return to Origin and the Impact of Foreign trend." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/17598.

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This study is mainly concerned with the renewal in Saudi novel in late 1980s. It also links this renewal with global literary trends via studying the most prominent foreign influences that influenced the writing of Saudi novelists in that period. The study focuses on magical realism trend, which has emerged in Latin America and then expanded to be a global trend influencing many novelists around the word including Saudi novelists. The study is divided into five chapters in addition to an introduction and a conclusion. Chapter one provides an overview of the main aspects of the study. It clarif
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Alblooshi, Fatima Khalifa. "The Role of Paratextual Elements in the Reception of Translation of Arabic Novels into English." Kent State University / OhioLINK, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=kent1617719565200925.

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Kashou, Hanan Hussam. "War and Exile In Contemporary Iraqi Women’s Novels." The Ohio State University, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1386038139.

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Al-Hassan, Hawraa. "Propaganda literature in Baʻthist cultural production (1979-2003) : the novels of Saddam Hussein as a case study". Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2014. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.648424.

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Westney, Emma Gaze. "Arabic literary modernism : the short story cycles and the episodic novels of Imil Nabibi and Idwar al-Kharrat." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.368130.

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Oersen, Sheridene Barbara. "The representation of women in four of Naguib Mahfouz's realist novels: Palace walk, Palace of desire, Sugar street and Midaq alley." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2005. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&amp.

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This thesis involved the various discourses around Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz's representation of women in four of his most well-known novels, which were originally written in Arabic. At the one extreme, he is described as a feminist writer who takes up an aggressive anti-patriarchal stance, delivering a multi-faceted critique on Egyptian society. Mahfouz's personal milieu, as well as the broader social context in which he finds himself, was given careful consideration. It was also considered whether the genre in which the four novels have been written has a significant influence on the
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Alaybani, Rasmyah. "Words and Images:Women’s Artistic Representations in Novels and Fine Art in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 2005-2017." The Ohio State University, 2019. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1565009668743079.

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Aplin, Thomas Michael. "Ambivalence and the national imaginary : nation and canon formation in the emergence of the Saudi novel." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/21006.

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Recent years have seen a surge of scholarship that foregrounds the relationship between the novel and the nation. The postcolonial condition of much of the Arab world has made the Arabic novel a compelling case. For historical reasons the focus has tended to be on the literary production of North Africa, the Levant and, to a lesser extent, Iraq. This thesis aims to redress the balance while interrogating certain assumptions about this relationship. Its main contention is that the early Saudi novel, as a unique case study, complicates traditional categorisations of the novel in Arabic, either i
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Books on the topic "Arabic novels"

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Niḍāl, Nazīh Abū. Novels & novelists from Jordan. Ministry of Culture, 2001.

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Alf ṣabāḥ wa-ṣabāḥ: Mutawāliyah ḥakāʼīyah. al-Ittiḥād al-ʻĀm lil-Udabāʼ wa-al-Kuttāb fī al-ʻIrāq, 2017.

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Saad, El-Gabalawy, Ḥaqqī Maḥmūd Ṭāhir 1884-1964, Lāshīn Maḥmūd Ṭāhir 1894-1954, and Elkhadem Saad, eds. Three pioneering Egyptian novels. York Press, 1986.

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Salīm, Suhayr. Dhikrayāt ʻAbd al-Wadūd. Kūmīks, 2016.

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Ashraf, Yūsuf, та Warshat Kādrāt (Artists' collective), ред. Khārij al-sayṭarah: Kūmīks ʼArabī (lil-kibār). Dār al-ʻAyn lil-Nashr, 2011.

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ʻAskar, Raḍwá. Ḥadatha bi-al-fiʻl: Qiṣaṣ muṣawwarah. Muʼassasat al-Fann al-Tāsiʻ, 2015.

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Shammout, Khaled. al-Lawn fī al-riwāyah al-ʻArabīyah: Dirāsah taḥlīlīyah = Color in Arabic novels : an analytical study. al-Muʼassasah al-ʻArabīyah lil-Dirāsāt wa-al-Nashr, 2016.

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Sudayrī, Jawharah bint Nāṣir. Kashkūl: Ḥikāyāt wa-ashʻār tārīkhīyah. Jadāwil lil-Nashr wa-al-Tarjamah wa-al-Tawzīʻ, 2018.

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Suhair, Majaj Lisa, Sunderman Paula W, and Saliba Therese, eds. Intersections: Gender, nation, and community in Arab women's novels. Syracuse University Press, 2002.

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Suhair, Majaj Lisa, Sunderman Paula W, and Saliba Therese, eds. Intersections: Gender, nation, and community in Arab women's novels. Syracuse University Press, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Arabic novels"

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Campbell, Ian. "Continuity Within Rupture in Two Novels by Muṣṭafā Maḥmūd." In Arabic Science Fiction. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-91433-6_6.

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Pardey, Charlotte. "Processing the Revolution: Exploring the Ways Tunisian Novels Reflect Political Upheavals." In Re-Configurations. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31160-5_16.

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Zusammenfassung Several years after the Tunisian uprising of 2010–11, it is now time to explore the literary production of its aftermath. This chapter focuses on novels written in French and Arabic that have found acclaim in the Tunisian literary scene, all of them winners of the Tunisian prize for fiction, the Prix Comar d’Or. At the same time, the works deal in some way with the uprising of 2010/2011. This starting point allows various insights: First, it compares the novels, exploring trends such as autobiographic reflections and the turn to past revolutions. Secondly, the chapter asks more structural questions about the context of the novels’ production (authors, publishers) as well as about their honorary reception through literary awards. Beyond characterizing the post-revolutionary Tunisian literary scene, this approach also makes it possible to address the ways in which the Tunisian literary establishment wants the revolutionary events to be reworked in literature.
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Elmahdy, Mohamed, Rainer Gruhn, and Wolfgang Minker. "Phonetic Transcription Using the Arabic Chat Alphabet." In Novel Techniques for Dialectal Arabic Speech Recognition. Springer US, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-1906-8_6.

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Campbell, Ian. "Inheritance and Intertextuality in a Three-Novel Series by Ṭība ’Aḥmad Ibrāhīm." In Arabic Science Fiction. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-91433-6_10.

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"3 Longing in arabic: Ambivalent Identities in Arabic Novels." In Between Banat. Duke University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781478023906-005.

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Leeuwen, Richard van. "The Journey in Two Arabic Novels." In Sensibilities of the Islamic Mediterranean. I.B.Tauris, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755610167.ch-007.

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Ahmed, Mohamed A. H. "The Use of Arabic Between Authors and Novels." In Arabic in Modern Hebrew Texts. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474444439.003.0004.

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This chapter analyses the diachronic development of Arabic use. The novels are categorised into three main corpora to trace Arabic use from early to late Hebrew novels. In this chapter, the style of each of the three authors is also analysed independently. This means that the style of each of the three authors is investigated according to the model developed in Chapter 2, and other linguistic and literary features of each author associated with Arabic/Hebrew are also discussed.
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Johnson, Rebecca C. "Errant Readers." In Stranger Fictions. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501753060.003.0004.

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This chapter discusses serialized translated novels. The Arabic novel made its own proper entry into the Arabic print sphere at this moment as a part of the uncertain reform project of print culture. Novels were published after and alongside a larger body of serialized translated novels that in fact occupied the greater part of the new audience's leisure reading habits. Over the course of the first decades of commercial print from the late 1850s to the late 1870s, serialized translated novels appeared in almost every type of Arabic periodical; for many readers, the word “novel” itself probably referred to these works and not the few original ones produced to compete with them. It was not just news translation that was central to the development of Arabic print culture; the translated novel, which appeared first and most prominently in serialized form, was often identified as part of periodicals' reform projects. At the same time that editors embraced translated fiction as a vehicle for their messages, however, their claim that these works served serious moral purposes was by no means indisputable. These novels' excesses were not always containable by the moral intentions of journal editors, who sometimes resorted to qualifications and elaborate interpretations in order to justify their publication. Print's civilizing reform mission, as uncertain as it was, had a primary object: the modern reading subject. Transforming the public into a reading public, and one that read properly, was the goal of many magazine producers who outlined ideal reading practices and modeled them through novels. And it was likewise a goal with an uncertain outcome.
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Civantos, Christina E., and Tracey Maher. "The Arab Novel of Latin America." In The Oxford Handbook of the Latin American Novel. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197541852.013.19.

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Abstract This chapter examines novels written by Arabic-speaking immigrants to Latin America and their descendants, emphasizing their diversity and commonalities with respect to language and theme. Providing an overview of the history of Arab migration from Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine to Latin America, the chapter addresses how these migrants’ home-country concerns meshed with those of the differing national and regional contexts to which they arrived, configuring life in the mahjar, or place of emigration. The chapter shows that the Arab Latin American novel includes works written in Arabic, Spanish, and Portuguese, while highlighting the complex ways this body of novels engages multiple languages, dialects, and registers, as well as the literary heritages of the Arab world and Latin America. These novels can be grouped according to shared orientations and themes: exile novels oriented toward the sociopolitical concerns of the home region in the Levant, migration novels focused on the travel and transitions between old and new homes, and diaspora novels oriented toward the experience of second- and third-generation members of the Latin American mahjar. These novels sustain and challenge prevalent discourses and ideologies pertaining to “Arabness” and conceptions of identity in countries such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico. Moreover, they address intergenerational relationships and struggles, and they navigate issues of linguistic and cultural loss (and gain) over time. Arab Latin American novels confront displacement and dislocation, respond to discrimination and alienation associated with orientalist stereotyping and prejudice, imagine new ways of belonging, and create unique conceptions of place.
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Ahmed, Mohamed A. H. "A Lexicological Study of Arabic and Judaeo-Arabic in Iraqi Hebrew Novels." In Studies on Arabic Dialectology and Sociolinguistics. Institut de recherches et d'études sur les mondes arabes et musulmans, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.iremam.3881.

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Conference papers on the topic "Arabic novels"

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Farhah, Eva, Reza Nugraha, and Abdul Malik. "The New Vision in the Creation of Arabic Novels in the 2000s." In Proceedings of the Third International Seminar on Recent Language, Literature, and Local Culture Studies, BASA, 20-21 September 2019, Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia. EAI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.20-9-2019.2296735.

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Elkilany, Elsayed Abdelwahed. "Arabic Language Topics in Al Arab Qatari Newspaper: A Study in Journalistic Treatment Patterns." In Qatar University Annual Research Forum & Exhibition. Qatar University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29117/quarfe.2020.0252.

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The purpose of this research is to explore the patterns of journalistic treatments for issues of Arab Language in Al Arab Qatari newspaper during the year of 2017. It also seeks to understand the degree to which this journalistic behavior enhances Qatar National identity. The importance of this research, which is funded by Qatar National Research Fund, No. UREP21-095-5-009 is to test the relationship between journalistic practices in relation to coverage of Arabic language issues and national identity. As interdisciplinary research combining Arabic language and journalism studies, its data wer
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Wael, Tasneem, Ahmed Hesham, Mohamed Youssef, Omar Adel, Hamis Hesham, and M. Saeed Darweesh. "Intelligent Arabic-Based Healthcare Assistant." In 2021 3rd Novel Intelligent and Leading Emerging Sciences Conference (NILES). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/niles53778.2021.9600526.

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Al-Shammari, Eiman, and Jessica Lin. "A novel Arabic lemmatization algorithm." In the second workshop. ACM Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1390749.1390767.

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Nissan, Ephraim. "Semitic-language names formed by semantic motivation from ‘less’, and their transcultural fortune: Whig leaders at Balliol as Dryden’s “sons of Belial”, and Swahili Mbilikimo for ‘Pygmy’." In International Conference on Onomastics “Name and Naming”. Editura Mega, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.30816/iconn5/2019/19.

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The biblical compositional pattern “sons of no X” for “X–less ones” has been somewhat (just a bit) productive in Modern Hebrew, but as the Old Testament has been so influential across cultures since the Septuagint became available in the Hellenistic world, one comes across novel uses to which “son of Belial” has been put, such as in Dryden’s political allegory in Absalom and Achitophel, even as the etymology of Belial was not transparent to ones who did not know Hebrew and its word /bli/ ‘without’. Moreover, Arabic /bala/ ‘without’ also occurs in wordformation, and as the influence of Arabic a
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El Seknedy, Mai, and Sahar Fawzi. "Speech Emotion Recognition System for Arabic Speakers." In 2022 4th Novel Intelligent and Leading Emerging Sciences Conference (NILES). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/niles56402.2022.9942431.

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Alargrami, Ali M., and Maged M. Eljazzar. "Imam: Word Embedding Model for Islamic Arabic NLP." In 2020 2nd Novel Intelligent and Leading Emerging Sciences Conference (NILES). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/niles50944.2020.9257931.

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Daoud, Mohammad. "Novel Approach towards Arabic Question Similarity Detection." In 2019 2nd International Conference on new Trends in Computing Sciences (ICTCS). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ictcs.2019.8923102.

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Ibrahim, Yousif H.-E. Y., Géza Regdon, Tamás Sovány, Katalin Kristó, and Gábor Katona. "Gum arabic as novel lysozyme carrier polymer." In V. Symposium of Young Researchers on Pharmaceutical Technology,Biotechnology and Regulatory Science. Institute of Pharmaceutical Technology and Regulatory Affairs, University of Szeged, Faculty of Pharmacy, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/syrptbrs.2023.36.

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Murtaza, Mobeen, Zeeshan Tariq, Xianmin Zhou, Dhafer Al Sheri, Muhammad Mahmoud, and Shahzad Kamal. "Application of a Novel Ecofriendly Okra Powder as Fluid Loss Controller in Water Based Drilling Fluids." In SPE Middle East Oil & Gas Show and Conference. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/204773-ms.

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Abstract Saudi Arabian based companies are spending many millions of dollars a year on import of drilling mud additives to meet the drilling industry demand. To cut the imported materials, locally available materials are preferable. Out of many drilling fluid additives, a single locally available additive such as fluid loss can save millions of dollars a year. The cost and locally available raw material justify the development of drilling fluid additives in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. In other aspect, local development provides many benefits to the Kingdom including industrial growth, technol
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Reports on the topic "Arabic novels"

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Comparing international approaches to food safety regulation of GM and Novel Foods. Food Standards Agency, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46756/sci.fsa.rdg239.

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The global area of genetically modified (GM) crop production has considerably increased over the past two decades, with GM crops now cultivated in about 28 countries, accounting for over 10% of the world’s arable land. A 'novel food' is any food or substance that has not been used for human consumption to a significant degree within the EU before 15 May 1997. Since then, there has been over 90 novel foods authorisations approved for use by the EU. Novel foods and genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are subject to a large variation in regulatory approaches around the world, for which many cou
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