Arabic-L:LING:Fully vowelled Arabic texts
Dilworth Parkinson
dilworth_parkinson at BYU.EDU
Thu Dec 4 00:00:05 UTC 2008
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arabic-L: Wed 03 Dec 2008
Moderator: Dilworth Parkinson <dilworth_parkinson at byu.edu>
[To post messages to the list, send them to arabic-l at byu.edu]
[To unsubscribe, send message from same address you subscribed from to
listserv at byu.edu with first line reading:
unsubscribe arabic-l ]
-------------------------Directory------------------------------------
1) Subject:Fully vowelled Arabic texts
2) Subject:Fully vowelled Arabic texts
-------------------------Messages-----------------------------------
1)
Date: 03 Dec 2008
From:Khaled Elghamry <elghamryk at ufl.edu>
Subject:Fully vowelled Arabic texts
Kellie,
You can try the following search engine:
gigablast.com
It supports searching Arabic text using vocalized words. So you
can use it to retreive vocalized (con)texts of your target words.
For example, if your search query is "??????", it will give you
search snippets of "??????" without removing the diacritics.
There are other search engines that search for vocalized texts -
though not as good as gigablast:
allplus.com
search.com (tends to throw in some random BAD SITES in the search
results)
collarity.com
You can also this website:
http://moamlat.al-islam.com/
It has a good number of classical texts on a wide range of topics,
and gives you the option of viewing the texts with and without the
vocalizations. Some parts have English translation.
I hope that helps
Khaled Elghamry, Ph.D.
Linguistics
University of Florida
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
2)
Date: 03 Dec 2008
From:David Schulz <David.Schulz at wlc.edu>
Subject:Fully vowelled Arabic texts
There is a nice web site that has lots and lots of voweled classical
Arabic:
http://hadith.al-islam.com/
Dig around, find a text you like, and then near the top of the page
look for the link: إظهار التشكيل (show the voweling).
There are links on the main page for various other languages, but
these appear to be broken.
Dr. David Schulz
Associate Professor, Computer Science
Wisconsin Lutheran College,
8800 W. Bluemound Rd
Milwaukee, WI 53226
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
End of Arabic-L: 03 Dec 2008
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/arabic-l/attachments/20081203/efc4f43d/attachment.htm>
More information about the Arabic-l
mailing list