: Many reviewers, such as those on ResearchGate and in the Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , recommend it as a revolutionary perspective for students and scholars of historical linguistics.
: Using statistical approaches, he examines features like verb forms and object pronouns across widely dispersed dialects to trace them back to a shared pre-diasporic stage. A Linguistic History of Arabic
: He integrates modern linguistic methodology with a deep reading of medieval Arabic grammarians , such as Sibawayhi, to find clues of early linguistic variation. Critical Reception : Many reviewers, such as those on ResearchGate
: He explores whether case markings (the 'irab ) were universal in early Arabic or if "caseless" varieties existed from the start. Critical Reception : He explores whether case markings
: He suggests that many "modern" dialect features are actually as old as, or even older than, those found in Classical Arabic. This implies that the Arabic-speaking world has always been linguistically diverse, rather than starting from a uniform "Classical" monolith.
: To support his claims, Owens uses the comparative-historical method —a standard in general linguistics but less commonly applied to Arabic until his work. He analyzes contemporary dialects from Nigeria to Uzbekistan to reconstruct the characteristics of their common ancestors. Book Structure and Themes
: Owens disputes the idea that modern dialects (Neo-Arabic) emerged solely from a pre-Islamic version of Classical Arabic. He posits that modern dialects share features with an ancient variety he calls "pre-diasporic Arabic," which coexisted alongside the language of the Qur'an and poetry.