The codified supra-regional standard used across the Arab world in education, media, literature, and formal speech. Derived from Classical Arabic, it has no native speakers and no single regional home — it is acquired as a formal register layered above the spoken vernaculars. Cairo, as the historical center of Arabic publishing, broadcasting, and scholarship, serves as its conventional locus.
El árabe magrebí de Túnez. Notable por las reducciones vocálicas, un rico repertorio de préstamos del francés y el italiano y una tradición literaria escrita inusual entre las variedades árabes coloquiales.