On Thursday morning, 4/8/2022, a PhD thesis, entitled (The Conversational Imperative in the Sermons of Ibn Nubatah Al-Fariqi 374 AH), was discussed at the Department of Arabic Language at the College of Arts / University of Basrah.
The thesis presented by the student Hamad Adl Nasser included a preface and three chapters. The preface dealt with a brief summary of the life of Ibn Nubatah Al-Fariqi, the first chapter discussed Ibn Nubatah's communicative competence, the second chapter discusses the principles of dialogue according to Nubatah, and the third chapter dealt with the significance of the requirement in the achievements.
The thesis concluded that the dialogue imperative is one of the most important deliberative theories, as it played an active role in diagnosing the indirect intention of the speaker. The basis of this phenomenon was the principle of cooperation and its rules that (Paul Grace) made of it a conceptual and descriptive device in the process of determining the intentions of the speaker, which the semantic load could not reveal, as the sentences of the language indicate meanings other than those carried by the apparent pronunciation.
Then the results explained the most important of what can be found from the deliberative procedural study on the Arabic heritage text.