WHAT HAS A COMBINED MEANING AMONG THE SUBSTITUTION' THE DIALECT AND THE SYNONYM

Authors

  • Moqbel bin Ali Al-Daadi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63226/iisj.v5i1.3106

Keywords:

Substitution / synonym / language.

Abstract

The research is concerned with tracing what has a combined meaning in Arabic, converging its pronunciation, looking at its classification between substitution, synonymy and language, and testing criteria that can be relied upon in classification. The researcher chose the hyphenated letters (z-o-y) in the fulfillment of the word as a sample for the study. After collecting the material, the research was divided verbally into the following sections: The first topic: between g and x The second topic: between the gai and the yard. The third topic: between Seine and Yad. Under each topic there is a division, considering the linguistic phenomenon: A- The commutation: in which the alternate terms are distinguished from others, distinguished by the origin of the branch. B - Language: it contains every word that is said: it is a language, with an attempt to attribute languages ​​to their owners as much as possible. C- Synonym: It includes expressions that I could not differentiate between its origin and its offshoot. The research, in order to reach its goals, required taking the inductive descriptive approach. So the research collected the material, traces the relationship of the word to the word, and the meaning to the meaning, and came out with a set of results, including: Emphasizing by induction that the words agree in meaning - if their terms are close - we are not certain that they are synonymous, rather they may be synonymous, or substituted, or are the language of some tribes. . And so on.

Published

2021-03-25

How to Cite

Al-Daadi, M. bin A. (2021). WHAT HAS A COMBINED MEANING AMONG THE SUBSTITUTION’ THE DIALECT AND THE SYNONYM. International Islamic Sciences Journal, 5(1), 24–57. https://doi.org/10.63226/iisj.v5i1.3106

Issue

Section

Qur'anic Exegesis and Sciences of the Qur'an