كتابة النص: الأستاذ الدكتور يوسف أبو العدوس - جامعة جرش قراءة النص: الدكتور أحمد أبو دلو - جامعة اليرموك مونتاج وإخراج : الدكتور محمد أبوشقير، حمزة الناطور، علي ميّاس تصوير : الأستاذ أحمد الصمادي الإشراف العام: الأستاذ الدكتور يوسف أبو العدوس
فيديو بمناسبة الإسراء والمعراج - إحتفال كلية الشريعة بجامعة جرش 2019 - 1440
فيديو بمناسبة ذكرى المولد النبوي الشريف- مونتاج وإخراج الدكتور محمد أبوشقير- كلية تكنولوجيا المعلومات
التميز في مجالات التعليم والبحث العلمي، وخدمة المجتمع، والارتقاء لمصاف الجامعات المرموقة محليا واقليميا وعالميا.
المساهمة في بناء مجتمع المعرفة وتطوره من خلال إيجاد بيئة جامعية، وشراكة مجتمعية محفزة للابداع، وحرية الفكر والتعبير، ومواكبة التطورات التقنية في مجال التعليم، ومن ثم رفد المجتمع بما يحتاجه من موارد بشرية مؤهلة وملائمة لاحتياجات سوق العمل.
تلتزم الجامعة بترسيخ القيم الجوهرية التالية: الإلتزام الإجتماعي والأخلاقي، الإنتماء،العدالة والمساواة، الإبداع، الجودة والتميّز، الشفافية والمحاسبة، الحرية المنظبطة والمستقبلية.
.Postdoctorate-University of Essex
.2012-2016. PhD in Linguistics, University of Essex
.MRes in Linguistics, University of Essex. 2012
.MA in Curricula and Teaching Methods/English Langugae, Amman Arab University for graduate studies. 2008
.BA in english Language and Literarure, Jerash University. 2004
It is received wisdom in variationist sociolinguistics that linguistic and social factors go hand in hand in structuring variability in language and any conse quent instances of language change. We address the complexity of such factors by exploring data from several Arabic dialects in the eastern Arab world. We demonstrate that language change does not always follow expect ed phonological trajectories, even in cases where older changes are recon structed to have operated along so-called universal patterns. In our explanation of recent changes in these dialects, we emphasise the role of social motivations for language change and the interactions between these social constraints and purely linguistic ones. Our analysis of change is sup ported by historical accounts of variation and change in Arabic. We illustrate how general principles of sociolinguistic theory apply to the Arabic data and provide additional layers of sociolinguistic information that highlight the im portance of diverse data for evaluating cross-linguistic generalisations. (Arabic, language change, historical sociolinguistics)
The formation of new dialects as a result of contact between speakers of mutually intelligibe varieties involves six basic processes according to Trudgill (2006,84-89). These are mixing, lrvrlling, unmarking, interdialect development, rellocation, and focusing. Trudgill refers to the first five processes collectivelly as "koineisation". As a linguistic process, focusing involves reduction in a mixture of linguistic elements from different dialectal sock, and hence reduction in intra-speaker and inter-speaker variability.
The article provides the first empirically based description of the Druze dialect in Jordan. The description is based on the speech of twelve male and female adult native speakers and seven hours of recorded material. The research was conducted during 2019 and 2022 in two Druze towns in northern Jordan, namel y Azraq and Umm al-Quṭṭēn. The article covers the basic grammar of the dialect, and lexis. The analysis shows that the Druze dialect of Jordan shares the bulk of its distinctive features with the Druze dialect of Ǧabal al-ʿArab, while displaying some linguistic influence from neighbouring Jordanian Sedentary as well as Bedouin varieties. A transcribed and translated sample of the dialect is included.
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