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Djibouti Arabic

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No where in Ethnologue definition of Adeni-Ta'izzi Arabic does it say it's also known as "Djibouti Arabic". --يوسف حسين (talk) 16:59, 12 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

It does, and I have provided three more sources that say "Djibouti Arabic". I also don't see why you removed that it is also spoken in Djibouti where all four sources clearly say that. So could you please not remove it? AcidSnow (talk) 13:46, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, this, and this are not reliable sources. We need something more scholarly and detailed. Why do they classify this as a language when it's actually a dialect? These links of yours claim that this accent is spoken in Libya, and the United kingdom as well. By whom exactly? I will tell you what i know since i am of a Yemenite origin. Aden is a port and one of the most ethnically diverse cities in Yemen and entire Arabia, with immigrants from India,Somalia,Djibouti,Ethiopia and south east Asia. The reason it's called Tai'zzi Arabic is because since the 1890s, workers from Ta'izz started to settle in that British colony. The people of Ta'izz overwhelmed an otherwise largely non Arab population in Aden. So this accent or dialect of Arabic was originated in Ta'izz. I do not know what is "South Yemeni Arabic" since Hadramawt was part of the previous South Yemeni state and if you know Arabic, you would notice the difference in dialect between the two. Ta'izz is actually part of the previous North Yemeni state just for the record. there is no such thing as "south Yemeni Arabic" or "north Yemeni Arabic", the term is not exactly known in Yemen or even amongst linguistics for that matter.
As for Djibouti and Somalia, your links claim that this dialect is also used in Libya! care to dwell on that please? Although i really object citing Ethnologue (classifying languages for purposes of Biblical translation! i cannot wait to read a bible in Sana'ani Arabic "language".) but you will notice that in their main definition page of this "language", they do not state that it's also called Djibouti Arabic. There are many problem with this representation, as if the people of Ta'izz speak the same language or Arabic dialect with the people of Djibouti and Somalia! They don't because you don't speak Arabic to begin with and i promise you that i have heard Somalis trying to speak Arabic before and it was not very pleasant. Ethnologue mentioned that in Djibouti, there are 36,000 people speak Ta'izzi Arabic (Adeni i presume since Aden used to be the cosmopolitan port). They mentioned that their Arabic (the Arabic of Djibouti people not the people of Tai'zz) under Djibouti country profile, is also called Djibouti Arabic. But that's not enough and more details are needed for this poor article. like Spoken by whom exactly in Djibouti (36,000 people)? --يوسف حسين (talk) 15:06, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
That's an irrelevant analogy since "Libyan Arabic" is not an alternate name for the dialect. "Djibouti Arabic" certainly is, though. Ethnologue also does actually state this on its main page for Ta'izzi-Adeni Arabic. Click on the "Show Details" drop-down menu under Djibouti toward the bottom of the screen [1]. Middayexpress (talk) 16:36, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
As mentioned above, they speak of Arabic used by people of Djibouti not Ta'izz, an alternative name (according to them) for the Arabic spoken in Djibouti specifically. It's relevant and questions the source reliability and accuracy in general. --يوسف حسين (talk) 16:44, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
another thing Midday express , your link mentions that it's spoken in Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Kenya, Libya, Somalia, United Kingdom. Why not mentioning that? --يوسف حسين (talk) 16:53, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Those other areas perhaps should be listed as well since Ethnologue indicates that they're among the secondary areas where Ta'izzi-Adeni Arabic is spoken. However, the difference between these areas and Djibouti is that a) none of them have lent an alternate name for the dialect, and b) Ethnologue specifically highlights Djibouti alone in its "Also spoken in" tab at the bottom of the dialect's main page [2]. Middayexpress (talk) 17:06, 14 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The gim

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This comment was moved from my talk page --Mahmudmasri (talk) 16:30, 28 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]

July 2019

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Please stop attacking other editors, as you did on Taʽizzi-Adeni Arabic. If you continue, you may be blocked from editing. Comment on content, not on other contributors or people. SharabSalam (talk) 16:06, 28 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Dear @SharabSalam:. First, you are not an admin to warn me for blocking. Second, no one would ever bring you a PDF source to read directly. Normally, people just write the source and it's your turn to find it somewhere if you can. You displayed unfriendliness to me in the edit summary for just adding the source a few minutes later.[3][4] You displayed bias, since it seems from your page that you are from that particular place, and therefore, apparently, you are taking the article very emotionally, not allowing someone from a different place to contribute, which is a non-encyclopedic attitude. Finally, that is the text in question:

--Mahmudmasri (talk) 16:30, 28 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]

In case an outsider wants to follow. The word Hugariyyah is used synonymously for Tihamiyya. --Mahmudmasri (talk) 16:37, 28 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Mahmudmasri I reverted because you added unsourced content not because I am from somewhere or something and all that nonsense; assuming bad faith etc. My edit summary was not unfriendly in fact your edit summary was impolite. What's wrong with saying "Not in the source. Next time put the source even before you add a content and write what the source explicitly states" and the source doesn't say it is "associated" which means "connected with" see what the source says and write only what the source explicitly says don't make things up see WP:OR. The bolded text doesn't support your addition. I am not an admin but I can definitely get you blocked for couple of issues now like personal attack and not assuming good faith like saying that I reverted you because I am from a certain place and you are not. Also Hugariyyah is not a synonym for Tihamiyya where did you come up with this?. Hugariyyah is just a another spelling of al-Hujariah which is a region in Taiz Governorate(not to be confused with Taiz city which is where the Adeni dialect is spoken). It has nothing to do with Tihamiyya dialect or Tihamah region. And BTW I read the source although I didn't directly download it (through a telegram bot).--SharabSalam (talk) 21:16, 28 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • If you didn't want people to assume things about you, then please don't assume things about people, additionally you really need to stop using a threatening tone!
  • And, an example of a poor, copied and pasted editing is verbatim, which also violates copyrights.
  • Whether Watson meant by Hugariyyah the particular place in the governorate or not, it lies within the western coastal region (Tihamah). Yemeni dialects spoken in Ta’izz and in the Hugariyyah. She didn't mention the dialects by their names, but by where they are spoken, i.e. Taizzi-Adeni and Tihami.
  • Apparently, many dialects are referred to by different names, like the way she chose to call Egyptian Arabic, "Cairene", which is also called Lower Egypt[ian] Arabic and Delta Arabic, i.a. --Mahmudmasri (talk) 00:29, 29 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • I am not asking you to use the same term just don't change what the source is saying, okay?.. The source doesn't say that the Adeni dialect is connected or related to Egyptian language. It says that in these places/dialects the gim is pronounced similarly. Which is trivia IMHO. Here is what your edit says:"...like Tihami dialect, a feature commonly associated with Egyptian Arabic". oh its commonly associated to Egyptian Arabic, according to who?.
  • al-Hujariah is not in Tihamah cost. The people of al-Hujariah do NOT speak Tihamai Arabic or even have a similar dialect. al-Hujariah is considered to be in the middle of Yemen. it is a mountainous region not a costal region. Stop moving the goalpost, you clearly don't have any idea about al-Hujariah; first saying al-Hujariah is a synonym of Tihama and now it lies in Tihama. just stop talking about this matter and move on. What they call Egyptian Arabic is of my least interest.
  • I have warned you that I am going to fill a report because of your uncivilised comment that was directed towards me in the edit summary: "The most arrogant/ignorant comment. The source was added with the page, I won't teach you to read if you can't; Undid revision 908151966 by SharabSalam (talk)". So I have the right to tell you that you might get blocked for personal attack whether you liked my tone or not. That's something I should do before you do another personal attack.
  • Clearly you felt offended because I reverted your edit. What should I have done?!
  • Please ping me if you want me to respose faster, I have this page in my watchlist but I mostly check the articles not the talk pages. --SharabSalam (talk) 01:31, 29 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Added Sections

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As per the guidelines on the WikiProject for Languages, I have added four sections to the stub, a classification section, a history section, a phonology section, and a vocabulary section. I have also rewritten what was previously in the stub to be more expansive and provide more detail. If anybody has any further information that they believe could be added to the stub, or if you believe that I may have added dubious or erroneous information, please feel free to reply to this and contribute. Thomash63 (talk) 01:18, 13 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Adeni lahja

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yemen and Somaliland 154.115.231.207 (talk) 22:38, 12 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]