Consonants JB is relatively conservative in preserving
Classical Arabic phonemes. Classical Arabic has remained as a uvular (or post-velar) stop, like Christian Baghdad Arabic, but unlike in Muslim Baghdad Arabic where it is pronounced as . is retained as , like in Christian Baghdadi, but unlike the Muslim dialect where it is sometimes . Classical Arabic interdental are preserved, like in Muslim Baghdadi Arabic (Christian Baghdadi Arabic merges them into ). has merged into . There are a few rare minimal pairs with (e.g.
wáḷḷa 'by God! (an oath)' vs.
wálla 'he went away',
ḅāḅa 'father, dad' vs.
bāba 'her door'). In other words, there are velarized segments which cannot be demonstrated to be phonemic, but which cannot be substituted, e.g.
ṃāṃa 'mother, mummy'. There is a certain degree of velarization harmony. is one of the primary distinguishing features of Jewish (as opposed to Muslim, but not Christian) Baghdadi Arabic. Older Arabic has shifted to (as in Christian, but not Muslim, Baghdadi Arabic). However has been re-introduced in non-Arabic loans (e.g.
brāxa 'blessing' <
Heb. ברכה,
qūri 'teapot' <
Pers. qūrī). Modern loan words from other
Arabic dialects also have this sound; this sometimes leads to cases where the same word may have two forms depending on context, e.g.
ʿáskaġ 'army' vs.
ḥākəm ʿáskari 'martial law'. There are many instances where this alternation leads to a subtle change in meaning, e.g.
faġġ 'he poured, served food' vs.
farr 'he threw'. The consonants were originally of foreign origin, but have pervaded the language to the extent that native speakers do not perceive or even realize their non-native origin.
Vowels Suprasegmentals Stress is usually on the ultimate or penultimate syllable, but sometimes on the antipenultimate (mostly in loans or compound words). ==Grammar==