Western Algerian Arabic

Western Algerian
Northwestern Algerian Arabic
Oranese Arabic
Oranian Arabic
Native toAlgeria
RegionCentral Maghreb
EthnicityAlgerian Arab-Berbers and Haratins
Language family
Afro-Asiatic
  • Semitic
    • Central Semitic
      • Arabic
        • Maghrebi Arabic
          • Algerian Arabic
            • Western Algerian
Writing system
Arabic script
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologoran1236
IETFarq-u-sd-dz31
Arabic dialect of Oran, Algeria

Western Algerian Arabic (also known as Northwestern Algerian Arabic, Oranese Arabic or Oranian Arabic; in Arabic: الوهرانية, romanized: al-wahrāniya) is a dialectal continuum of Algerian dialects Arabic, mainly spoken in Oran, Algeria.[1]

It the western regional dialect of Algerian Arabic, belongs to the Maghrebi Arabic family, and marked by a Berber and Spanish substrates.[2] As well it shares a rich vocabulary common with as the Maltese and the Tunisian Arabic. It has become known outside of Algeria, notably thanks to the Algerian folk music Raï since the 1980s.

See also

References

  1. ^ Algérie: Situation géographique et démolinguistique sur tlfq.ulaval.ca' (in French)
  2. ^ Le français en Algérie: lexique et dynamique des langues, Par Ambroise Queffélec, P 38 (in French)
  • flagAlgeria portal
  • iconLanguage portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Arabic language
OverviewsScriptsLetters
  • ʾAlif
  • Bāʾ
  • Tāʾ
  • Ṯāʾ
  • Ǧīm
  • Ḥāʾ
  • Ḫāʾ
  • Dāl
  • Ḏāl
  • Rāʾ
  • Zāy
  • Sīn
  • Šīn
  • Ṣād
  • Ḍād
  • Ṭāʾ
  • Ẓāʾ
  • ʿAyn
  • Ġayn
  • Fāʾ
  • Qāf
  • Kāf
  • Lām
  • Mīm
  • Nūn
  • Hāʾ
  • Wāw
  • Yāʾ
Varieties
Pre-Islamic
Literary
Modern
spoken
Levantine
North
South
Maghrebi
Pre-Hilalian
Hilalian
Mesopotamian
Gilit
North (Qeltu)
Peninsular
Others
Africa
Asia
Sociological
Judeo-Arabic
Creoles
and pidgins
AcademicLinguisticsCalligraphy
· ScriptTechnicalOther
  • Islam and Arabic language
  • Italics indicate extinct languages
  • Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left.
  • Category
Stub icon

This article related to the Arabic language is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e