Title: THE INFLUENCE OF HOUSEMAIDS ON SAUDI YOUNG CHILDREN’S ARABIC
LANGUAGE ACQUISITION FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF MOTHERS
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Authors: Prof. Reima Al-Jarf |
Abstract: Almost every upper- and middle-class family in Saudi Arabia has a foreign housemaid who does the
housework and takes care of the children. This study aims to find out whether foreign housemaids have
an impact on children’s acquisition of Arabic, the children’s first language. Surveys with 300 mothers
with children under the age of six revealed that most housemaids speak neither English nor Arabic
upon arrival in Saudi Arabia. The housemaids learn to speak Arabic by immersion. However, their
language is characterized by faulty pronunciation and grammatical forms, production of incomplete
sentences, and limited vocabulary. Mothers surveyed asserted that about half the children imitate the
housemaid all the time when they first start to learn to speak Arabic at age two and three years. Those
children cannot produce Arabic sounds correctly and make grammatical mistakes, but when they go
to kindergarten, traces of foreign accent resulting from imitating the housemaid’s foreign Arabic
accent disappear, and the child is able to speak Arabic correctly and natively. This means that
housemaids have a temporary influence on Saudi children’s acquisition of Arabic as the children get
older. It seems that the housemaid’s influence depends on how much time the child spends with her,
how much time the mother spends with the child, and whether the child has siblings and playmates. |
Keywords: Housemaids, domestic helpers, child language, language development, first language
acquisition, children under 6, Saudi children, acquisition of Arabic.
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.37500/IJESSR.2022.5123
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