Abstract
Annotation. The purpose of this article is to attempt to clarify the phonetic phenomenon described by Ivanov Austrian Arabist Ambros von Arne (1942-2007) in his article Haplologie und Assimilation im. V. und VI. Verbstamm im Koran. In this article, the author expresses his point of view in the case of assimilation in the forms of the verbs in V and VI, Present, 2nd and 3rd singular, 2nd plural and 3rd feminine in Warsh transmission. The author agrees with Von Arne in describing the change in the reading of Hafs, where the case of haplology occurs. At the same time, the opinion is expressed that in Warsh transmission event does not end in assimilation. After assimilation, elision of the vowel sound occurs. Research Methods. The author??s analysis, based on the method of comparative harmonization of phenomena in the sounds of the Arabic language in transmissions, especially in the transmission of Warsh, which is less familiar to a wide audience, has special scientific and practical significance. omments are made on previously expressed considerations regarding the problem, and an attempt is made to overestimate the phonetic phenomena and make an appropriate assessment. The scientific novelty of the study lies in the analysis and classification of phonetic phenomena in transmissions not from the point of view of generalization principles developed by Muslim-Arab researchers, but from the point of view of their analysis and classification by including them in combinatorial variables. The conclusion is that the approach to phonetic phenomena in Hafs and 2 Warsh transmissions may deviate from the general principles developed by Muslim-
Arab researchers and distinguish them from the corresponding types of combinatorial changes. It is noted that: In one transmission ([ta]) in the 3rd person feminine, in the present future tense form 2nd and 3rd person singular, 2nd plural verbs in the 5th and 6th chapters is used being subjected to a syllabus elision -haplology, in another transmission, one consonant with its discontent effect makes an open syllable consonant preceding it undergoes an assimilation, and the vowel between them undergoes an elision. It is not possible to agree with the conclusion that the event ends with the assimilation, because it is followed by an important phonetic phenomenon, such as vowel elision. 2. [ §?], [d??] v? [t] which are read with a complete realization in the sound combinations [ §?t], [d?? ?], [d?? §?] and [t §?] in AH, are affected by a complete regressive contact assimilation in NW: [tt], [ ? ?], [ §? §?] are on the contrary are read with a complete realization as [s?ÿ §?]/[ §? §?] and [b??m]/[m?m?] in NW, which are affected by a complete regressive contact assimilation in AH: [s?ÿ §?] and [b??m].
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