The Power of Modern Linguistic Theory and Arabic Linguistic Heritage

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Dhuya Muhammad Sarhan, Muhammad Yas Kheder, Hassan Ali Taha

Abstract

This research addresses the morphology of words between modern linguistic theory and traditional linguistics. It also examines the phenomena of substitution and works to define its origins and controls within two sections. In the first, we addressed (the theory of collocation and morphology), while in the second, While in the second section we focused on (the theory of substitutional relations and the ability of words), the research concluded that the lexical connection depends primarily on the juxtaposition of those units that are organized according to formal and internal relations, or according to a grammatical compositional structure that appears on the surface, and internal relations that form the deep structure of the composition and the text, which is the meaning that carries the intentions of the originator of the linguistic statement.

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