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Ghyzayel M. Al-Otaibi

Lecturer

PhD in Linguistics & Translation / MBA in Business Admin.

اللغات وعلومها
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publication
Journal Article
2021

Religious Binomials in Hebrew and Arabic: A Review of Literature

Al-Otaibi, Ghuzayyil Mohammed . 2021

Binomials (i.e., a collocation of two connected words belonging to the same word class, e.g., heaven and earth) are very frequent in every language. They are more commonly found in religious texts of Semitic languages. Compared to other types of collocations, religious binomials are sometimes idiomatic, alliterative, culture-specific, or adhere to one common word order. However, as there is a dearth of studies on religious binomials in Hebrew, there is only one study on religious Arabic binomials used in a supplication. Studies on Hebrew focused on the constraints determining the order of binomial words, their semantic and grammatical categorization, how frequent they are, their functions, etc. Corpus-based studies on Semitic binomials were conducted for the purpose of proving that Semitic languages are similar. Nevertheless, there are no studies that explored religious binomials in Arabic in relation to those used in Hebrew. Thus, it might be insightful if future research on binomials focuses on religious ones in the Holy Qurʾān and Ḥadīth. 

Publication Work Type
Research Article
Volume Number
4
Issue Number
3
Magazine \ Newspaper
International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation
Pages
209-215
more of publication
publications

Binomials, as a sub-type of collocation, are made of two connected words (e.g., heaven and earth). Similar to other lexical collocations, binomials can be idiomatic, ambiguous, or culture-specific…

by Ghuzayyil Mohammed Al-Otaibi
2023
publications

Binomials, as a sub-type of collocation, are made of two connected words (e.g.,
heaven and earth), and they are considered challenging to translate because some are
idiomatic,…

by Ghuzayyil Mohammed Al-Otaibi
2021
Published in:
King Saud University
publications

Background: Synonymous words behave differently, and language users should be aware of the fact that though near-synonyms share similar denotational meanings, they require different collocates.…

by Ghuzayyil Mohammed Al-Otaibi
Published in:
Clarivate