Verse:Mwtqwlqwj/Qwbmwdqwg: Difference between revisions

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Corsica was ruled by Muslim Arabs (8th c. - 11th c.), then by the Irish (11th c. - 16th c.), then the French (16th c. - 19th c. Ireland ceded it to France when it was being threatened by Remonitionists and the Hivantish), then the Azalic English (19th c. - 20th c.). Corsica gained independence from the Azalic English in 1954.  
Corsica was ruled by Muslim Arabs (8th c. - 11th c.), then by the Irish (11th c. - 16th c.), then the French (16th c. - 19th c. Ireland ceded it to France when it was being threatened by Remonitionists and the Hivantish), then the Azalic English (19th c. - 20th c.). Corsica gained independence from the Azalic English in 1954.  


The first surviving text in Corsican Arabic is dated to 1515. Though it uses mainly native vocabulary, it has most of the syntactic features of modern Corsican Arabic.
The first surviving text in Corsican Arabic is dated to 1515. Though it uses mainly native vocabulary, it has most of the morphological and syntactic features of modern Corsican Arabic.


Corsican Arabic evolved from Sardino-Arabic, a fictional vernacular Arabic variety similar to our old Maghrebi Arabic which had the following features:
Corsican Arabic evolved from Sardino-Arabic, a fictional vernacular Arabic variety similar to our old Maghrebi Arabic which had the following features: