اكتساب تركيب العربية المقطعي في لغة رياض الأطفال
This study aims to explore the peculiarity of children?s
acquisition of Arabic syllabic structure in the late linguistic
imitation stage. The study does this through extracting the
syllabic structures, identifying their distribution and formation,
clarifying the phonological processes that are utilized in their
production, and examining three particular variables that may
influence these processes in their formation. These are diglossia,
age, and gender. The study used the descriptive experimental
approach in analyzing the apraxia of speech, as well as the data
on syllable theory in the phonological level. In collecting its
data, the study used the qulatative purposeful approach by
selecting a sample of kindergarten children that included 21
children of regular learning capabilities. Of the sample, 8 were
male and 13 were female. Their ages ranged from (4) to (5) years, enrolled in Kg1 and Kg2 at
Azad Model Kindergarten in Irbid. A phonological tool was deliberately designed to motivate
the children by imitating, having dialogues, recording and analyzing every child's vocal
performance, considering the standardized adult?s Arabic speech as the criteria. The novelty of
this study lies in its contributions to acknowledge the syllabic structure of children and its
formation for scientific theoretical, and functional purposes.
The study concluded that the participant?s productions reveal a completion of syllable
forms, a tendency to reduce the number of syllables in words, difference of the transposition
and the distribution of syllables from standard Arabic, relying on deletion as a substantial
phonological process in formation of syllabic structure. The study also revealed that of
three causal variables, the impact of diglossia and age stage on the syllabic structure had
the most effect. Gender proved to be the weakest casual factor of the three. The study
concludes with a set of recommendations for future research on syllable structure, and to
the field of its acquisition and teaching