Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students

The current study investigated the attitudes of 340 Saudi college students towards two Arabic dialectal variations, <i>kaskasah</i> and <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>, utilizing the matched-guise technique. Participants listened to recordings of a speaker using each variation and evaluated...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saeed Ali Al Alaslaa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-12-01
Series:Languages
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/10/1/2
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832588153795379200
author Saeed Ali Al Alaslaa
author_facet Saeed Ali Al Alaslaa
author_sort Saeed Ali Al Alaslaa
collection DOAJ
description The current study investigated the attitudes of 340 Saudi college students towards two Arabic dialectal variations, <i>kaskasah</i> and <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>, utilizing the matched-guise technique. Participants listened to recordings of a speaker using each variation and evaluated the speaker on various personality traits, regional origin, and hireability. The findings revealed generally positive attitudes towards both variations, with the majority associating the speaker with desirable traits such as humility, kindness, friendliness, and respectfulness. However, the <i>kaskasah</i> variation was perceived slightly more favorably overall compared to <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>. The study also found distinct regional associations, with <i>kaskasah</i> slightly more strongly linked to the Najdi dialect and <i>kaʃkaʃah</i> overwhelmingly associated with the Southern dialect. Notably, a considerable minority indicated that they would not hire speakers of these variations, particularly <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>, suggesting some degree of dialect-based bias. The study contributes to research on language attitudes in Saudi Arabia by highlighting the complex interplay between dialectal variation, regional identity, and social evaluation. The findings underscore the importance of promoting linguistic awareness and inclusivity to mitigate the negative effects of dialect-based stereotyping and bias.
format Article
id doaj-art-ac7bfad1aab84970b31318bbd0856a7e
institution Kabale University
issn 2226-471X
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Languages
spelling doaj-art-ac7bfad1aab84970b31318bbd0856a7e2025-01-24T13:38:21ZengMDPI AGLanguages2226-471X2024-12-01101210.3390/languages10010002Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University StudentsSaeed Ali Al Alaslaa0Department of Arabic Language, King Abdulaziz University, Jiddah 21589, Saudi ArabiaThe current study investigated the attitudes of 340 Saudi college students towards two Arabic dialectal variations, <i>kaskasah</i> and <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>, utilizing the matched-guise technique. Participants listened to recordings of a speaker using each variation and evaluated the speaker on various personality traits, regional origin, and hireability. The findings revealed generally positive attitudes towards both variations, with the majority associating the speaker with desirable traits such as humility, kindness, friendliness, and respectfulness. However, the <i>kaskasah</i> variation was perceived slightly more favorably overall compared to <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>. The study also found distinct regional associations, with <i>kaskasah</i> slightly more strongly linked to the Najdi dialect and <i>kaʃkaʃah</i> overwhelmingly associated with the Southern dialect. Notably, a considerable minority indicated that they would not hire speakers of these variations, particularly <i>kaʃkaʃah</i>, suggesting some degree of dialect-based bias. The study contributes to research on language attitudes in Saudi Arabia by highlighting the complex interplay between dialectal variation, regional identity, and social evaluation. The findings underscore the importance of promoting linguistic awareness and inclusivity to mitigate the negative effects of dialect-based stereotyping and bias.https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/10/1/2language attitudesSaudi dialects<i>kaskasah</i><i>kaʃkaʃah</i>matched-guise techniquedialect bias
spellingShingle Saeed Ali Al Alaslaa
Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students
Languages
language attitudes
Saudi dialects
<i>kaskasah</i>
<i>kaʃkaʃah</i>
matched-guise technique
dialect bias
title Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students
title_full Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students
title_fullStr Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students
title_short Attitudes Toward Dialectal Variations in Saudi Arabic: A Case Study of King Abdulaziz University Students
title_sort attitudes toward dialectal variations in saudi arabic a case study of king abdulaziz university students
topic language attitudes
Saudi dialects
<i>kaskasah</i>
<i>kaʃkaʃah</i>
matched-guise technique
dialect bias
url https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/10/1/2
work_keys_str_mv AT saeedalialalaslaa attitudestowarddialectalvariationsinsaudiarabicacasestudyofkingabdulazizuniversitystudents