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Encyclopedia > Semitic language

The Semitic languages are the northeastern subfamily of the Afro-Asiatic languages, and the only family of this group spoken in Asia.


The most common Semitic languages spoken today are Arabic, Amharic, Hebrew, and Tigrinya.


The term "Semitic" for these language is etymologically a misnomer in some ways (see Semitic), but is the standard term in linguistics.


The classification given below is probably the most widespread - following Robert Hetzron - but is still disputed; in particular, several Semitists still argue for the traditional view of Arabic as part of South Semitic, and a few (eg Alexander Militarev) see the South Arabian languages as a third branch of Semitic alongside East and West Semitic, rather than as a subgroup of South Semitic.

Contents

The Eastern Semitic Languages

Controversial (either East Semitic or Northwest Semitic): Eblaite language -- extinct


The Central Semitic languages

Northwest Semitic languages

South Central (Arabic) languages

The South Semitic languages

Western (within South Semitic)

  • Ethiopic languages
    • North
    • South
      • Transverse
        • Amharic language
        • Argobba language
        • Harari language
        • East Gurage languages
          • Selti language
          • Wolane language
          • Zway language
          • Ulbare language
          • Inneqor language
      • Outer
        • Soddo language
        • Goggot language
        • Muher language
        • West Gurage languages
          • Masqan language
          • Ezha language
          • Gura language
          • Gyeto language
          • Ennemor language
          • Endegen language
  • Old South Arabian -- extinct
    • Sabaean language -- extinct
    • Minaean language -- extinct
    • Qatabanian language -- extinct
    • Hadhramautic languages -- extinct

Eastern (within South Semitic)

  • Soqotri language
  • Mehri language
  • Jibbali language
  • Harsusi language
  • Bathari language
  • Hobyot language

Common characteristics

These languages all exhibit a pattern of words consisting of triconsonantal roots, with vowel changes, prefixes, and suffixes used to inflect them. For instance, in Hebrew:

gdl means "big" but is no part of speech and not a word, just a root
gadol means "big" and is a masculine adjective
gdola means "big" (feminine adjective)
giddel means "he grew" (transitive verb)
gadal means "he grew" (intransitive verb)
higdil means "he magnified" (transitive verb)
magdelet means "magnifier" (lens)
spr is the root for "count" or "recount"
sefer means "book" (containing tales which are recounted)
sofer means "scribe" (Masoretic scribes counted verses)
mispar means "number".

Many roots are shared among more than one Semitic language. For example, the root ktb, a root signifying writing, exists in both Hebrew and Arabic ("he wrote" is rendered in Hebrew katav and in Classical Arabic kataba).


The following list will provide some equivalent words in Semitic languages.

Akkadian Aramaic Arabic Hebrew English translation
zikaru dikrā ḏakar zåḵår Male
maliku malkā malik mĕlĕḵ King
imêru ḥamarā ḥimār ḥămōr Donkey
erṣetu ʔarʿā ʔarḍ ʔĕrĕṣ Land


Sometimes certain roots differ in meaning from one Semitic language to another. For example, the root b-y-ḍ in Arabic has the meaning of "white" as well as "egg", whereas in Hebrew it only means "egg". The root l-b-n means "milk" in Arabic, but the color "white" in Hebrew.


Of course, there is sometimes no relation between the roots. For example, "knowledge" is represented in Hebrew by the root y-d-ʿ but in Arabic by the roots ʿ-r-f and ʿ-l-m.


Other Afro-Asiatic languages show similar patterns, but more usually with biconsonantal roots; e.g. in Kabyle afeg means "fly!", while affug means "flight", and yufeg means "he flew".


See Also

  • List of Proto-Semitic roots
  • Proto-Semitic

  Results from FactBites:
 
Proto-Semitic Language and Culture. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. 2000 (3655 words)
The Appendix of Semitic Roots (Appendix II) that follows this essay is designed to allow the reader to trace English words derived from Semitic languages back to their fundamental components in Proto-Semitic, the parent language of all ancient and modern Semitic languages.
Central Semitic is further subdivided into the South Arabian inscriptional languages; classical, medieval, and modern forms of Arabic; and the Northwest Semitic languages, which include Hebrew and Aramaic.
A distinctive characteristic of the Semitic languages is the formation of words by the combination of a “root” of consonants in a fixed order, usually three, and a “pattern” of vowels and, sometimes, affixes before and after the root.
History of the Arabic (858 words)
Semitic languages have a recorded history going back thousands of years, one of the most extensive continuous archives of documents belonging to any human language group.
While the origins of the Semitic language family are currently in dispute among scholars, there is agreement that they flourished in the Mediterranean Basin area, especially in the Tigris-Euphrates river basin and in the coastal areas of the Levant.
The Semitic language family is a descendant of proto-Semitic, an ancient language that was exclusively spoken and has no written record.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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