The Permutative of Self-Correction in Arabic: Terminological Evolution and Typological Reorganisation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24425/for.2025.157015Abstract
This article examines the last class of Arabic permutatives (badal), which is often set apart by the grammarians themselves, since it usually involves the speaker correcting himself after having made an unintended mistake, in short, a slip of the tongue. As most Arabic grammars written by Western scholars are almost entirely silent on this topic, it is necessary to turn to the medieval Arabic grammarians. There, however, the data vary considerably from one author to another, which made it essential to consult as many sources as possible in order to grasp the question comprehensively. This reveals that the limitation of the number of subtypes of this permutative to three appears to mark a confinement of the Arabic grammatical tradition within the framework of Sībawayhi’s text (d. 180/796?). One then realises that the taxonomy adopted for the hyperonym most often passes over in silence the essential feature of this type of permutative—namely, retraction—on the grounds that it has usually been understood merely as a hyponym within the category. Finally, although in certain cases, but only in some, it is possible to relate this type of permutative to the notion of abrogation (here, of the permuted term, mubdal min-hu), such abrogation is by no means necessary, since some grammarians emphasise the continued presence of both the permuted term and the permutative. The phenomenon, in fact, rests upon a continuum of intentionality, which may apply to the permutative alone, or jointly to the permutative and the permuted term, or even to both together and to the relation that unites them. All this, while once again showing to what extent at least some medieval grammarians were far from tone-deaf, and how central pragmatic awareness was to their approach, thus calls for a revision of how we envisage this category. It reminds us of the existence of a double retraction, depending on whether or not it is abrogative, which in turn makes it possible to propose a new presentation of this category, too easily and too hastily labelled badal al-ġalaṭ.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Folia Orientalia

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Copyright on any open access article in the Folia Orientalia journal published by Polish Academy of Sciences is retained by the author(s). Authors grant Polish Academy of Sciences a license to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher. Authors also grant any user the right to use the article freely if its integrity is maintained and its original authors, citation details and publisher are identified. The Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 formalizes these and other terms and conditions of publishing articles.
The editorial team of Folia Orientalia implements an open access policy by publishing materials in the form of the so-called Gold Open Access and encourages authors to place articles published in the journal in open repositories (after the review or the final version of the publisher), provided that a link to the journal’s website is provided.
Exceptions to copyright policy
For the articles which were previously published, before year 2020, policies that are different from the above. In all such, access to these articles is free from fees or any other access restrictions. Permissions for the use of the texts published in that journal may be sought directly from the editorial team of Folia Orientalia, by e-mail: folia.orientalia@uj.edu.pl.
English
Język Polski