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Afroasiatic languages

The Afroasiatic languages (or Afro-Asiatic, sometimes Afrasian), also known as Hamito-Semitic or Semito-Hamitic, are a language family (or "phylum") of about 400 languages spoken predominantly in West Asia, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, and parts of the Sahara and Sahel.[2] Over 500 million people are native speakers of an Afroasiatic language, constituting the fourth-largest language family after Indo-European, Sino-Tibetan, and Niger–Congo.[3] Most linguists divide the family into six branches: Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, Egyptian, Semitic, and Omotic.[4] The vast majority of Afroasiatic languages are considered indigenous to the African continent, including all those not belonging to the Semitic branch.

Afroasiatic
Hamito-Semitic, Semito-Hamitic, Afrasian
Geographic
distribution
North Africa, West Asia, Horn of Africa, Sahel, and Malta
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primary language families
Proto-languageProto-Afroasiatic
Subdivisions
ISO 639-2 / 5afa
Glottologafro1255
Distribution of the Afroasiatic languages

Arabic, if counted as a single language, is by far the most widely spoken within the family, with around 300 million native speakers concentrated primarily in the Middle East and North Africa.[2] Other major Afroasiatic languages include the Chadic Hausa language with over 34 million native speakers, the Semitic Amharic language with 25 million, and the Cushitic Somali language with 15 million. Other Afroasiatic languages with millions of native speakers include the Cushitic Sidaama language, the Semitic Tigrinya language and the Omotic Wolaitta language, though most languages within the family are much smaller in size.[5] There are many well-attested Afroasiatic languages from antiquity that have since died or gone extinct, including Egyptian and the Semitic languages Akkadian, Biblical Hebrew, Phoenician, Amorite, and Ugaritic. There is no consensus among historical linguists as to precisely where or when the common ancestor of all Afroasiatic languages, known as Proto-Afroasiatic, was originally spoken. However, most agree that the Afroasiatic homeland was located somewhere in northeastern Africa, with specific proposals including the Horn of Africa, Egypt, the eastern Sahara. A significant minority of scholars argues for an origin in the Levant. The reconstructed timelines of when Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken vary extensively, with dates ranging from 18,000 BC to 8,000 BC. Even the latest plausible dating makes Afroasiatic the oldest language family accepted by contemporary linguists.[6]

Comparative study of Afroasiatic is hindered by the massive disparities in textual attestation between its branches: while the Semitic and Egyptian branches are attested in writing as early as the fourth millennium BC, Berber, Cushitic, and Omotic languages were often not recorded until the 19th or 20th centuries.[7] While systematic sound laws have not yet been established to explain the relationships between the various branches of Afroasiatic, the languages share a number of common features. One of the most important for establishing membership in the branch is a common set of pronouns.[8] Other widely shared features include a prefix m- which creates nouns from verbs, evidence for alternations between the vowel "a" and a high vowel in the forms of the verb, similar methods of marking gender and plurality, and some details of phonology such as the presence of pharyngeal fricatives. Other features found in multiple branches include a specialized verb conjugation using suffixes (Egyptian, Semitic, Berber), a specialized verb conjugation using prefixes (Semitic, Berber, Cushitic), verbal prefixes deriving middle (t-), causative (s-), and passive (m-) verb forms (Semitic, Berber, Egyptian, Cushitic), and a suffix used to derive adjectives (Egyptian, Semitic).

Name edit

In current scholarship, the most common names for the family are Afroasiatic (or Afro-Asiatic), Hamito-Semitic, and Semito-Hamitic.[9][10] Other proposed names that have yet to find widespread acceptance include Erythraic/Erythraean, Lisramic, Noahitic, and Lamekhite.[11][12]

Friedrich Müller introduced the name Hamito-Semitic to describe the family in his Grundriss der Sprachwissenschaft (1876).[13] The variant Semito-Hamitic is mostly used in older Russian sources.[9] The elements of the name were derived from the names of two sons of Noah as attested in the Book of Genesis's Table of Nations passage: "Semitic" from the first-born Shem, and "Hamitic" from the second-born Ham (Genesis 5:32).[14] Within the Table of Nations, each of Noah's sons is presented as the common progenitor of various people groups deemed to be closely related: among others Shem was the father of the Jews, Assyrians, and Arameans, while Ham was the father of the Egyptians and Cushites. This genealogy does not reflect the actual origins of these peoples' languages: for example, the Canaanites are descendants of Ham according to the Table, even though Hebrew is now classified as a Canaanite language, while the Elamites are ascribed to Shem despite their language being totally unrelated to Hebrew.[15] The term Semitic for the Semitic languages had already been coined in 1781 by August Ludwig von Schlözer, following an earlier suggestion by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in 1710.[16] Hamitic was first used by Ernest Renan in 1855 to refer to languages that appeared similar to the Semitic languages, but were not themselves provably a part of the family.[16] The belief in a connection between Africans and the Biblical Ham, which had existed at least as far back as Isidore of Seville in the 6th century AD, led scholars in the early 19th century to speak vaguely of "Hamian" or "Hamitish" languages.[17]

The term Hamito-Semitic has largely fallen out of favor among linguists writing in English, but is still frequently used in the scholarship of various other languages, such as German.[18][19] Several issues with the label Hamito-Semitic have led many scholars to abandon the term and criticize its continued use. One common objection is that the Hamitic component inaccurately suggests that a monophyletic "Hamitic" branch exists alongside Semitic. In addition, Joseph Greenberg has argued that Hamitic possesses racial connotations, and that "Hamito-Semitic" overstates the centrality of the Semitic languages within the family.[20][21][22] By contrast, Victor Porkhomovsky suggests that the label is simply an inherited convention, and doesn't imply a duality of Semitic and "Hamitic" any more than Indo-European implies a duality of Indic and "European".[12] Because of its use by several important scholars and in the titles of significant works of scholarship, the total replacement of Hamito-Semitic is difficult.[22]

While Greenberg ultimately popularized the name "Afroasiatic" in 1960, it appears to have been coined originally by Maurice Delafosse, as French afroasiatique, in 1914.[20] The name refers to the fact that it is the only major language family with large populations in both Africa and Asia.[12] Due to concerns that "Afroasiatic" could imply the inclusion of all languages spoken across Africa and Asia, the name "Afrasian" (Russian: afrazijskije) was proposed by Igor Diakonoff in 1980. At present it predominantly sees use among Russian scholars.[21][12]

The names Lisramic—based on the Afroasiastic root *lis- ("tongue") and the Egyptian word rmṯ ("person")—and Erythraean—referring to the core area around which the languages are spoken, the Red Sea—have also been proposed.[9]

Distribution and branches edit

 
A diagram of the six widely recognized branches of the Afroasiatic family, including some of the larger or more culturally significant languages in each branch.

Scholars generally consider Afroasiatic to have between five and eight branches. The five that are universally agreed upon are Berber (also called "Libyco-Berber"), Chadic, Cushitic, Egyptian, and Semitic.[23] Most specialists consider the Omotic languages to constitute a sixth branch.[4] Due to the presumed distance of relationship between the various branches, many scholars prefer to refer to Afroasiatic as a "linguistic phylum" rather than a "language family".[24]

M. Victoria Almansa-Villatoro and Silvia Štubňová Nigrelli write that there are about 400 languages in Afroasiatic;[2] Ethnologue lists 375 languages.[3] Many scholars estimate fewer languages; exact numbers vary depending on the definitions of "language" and "dialect".[24]

Berber edit

The Berber (or Libyco-Berber) languages are spoken today by perhaps 16 million people.[25] They are often considered to constitute a single language with multiple dialects.[26] Other scholars, however, argue that they are a group of around twelve languages, about as different from each other as the Romance or Germanic languages.[27] In the past, Berber languages were spoken throughout North Africa except in Egypt;[28] since the 7th century CE, however, they have been heavily affected by Arabic and have been replaced by it in many places.[29][30]

There are two extinct languages potentially related to modern Berber.[31] The first is the Numidian language, represented by over a thousand short inscriptions in the Libyco-Berber alphabet, found throughout North Africa and dating from the 2nd century BCE onward.[30] The second is the Guanche language, which was formerly spoken on the Canary Islands and went extinct in the 17th century CE.[31] The first longer written examples of modern Berber varieties only date from the 16th or 17th centuries CE.[32]

Chadic edit

Chadic languages number between 150 and 190, making Chadic the largest family in Afroasiatic.[33] The Chadic languages are typically divided into three major branches, East Chadic, Central Chadic, and West Chadic.[34] Most Chadic languages are located in the Chad basin, with the exception of Hausa.[35] Hausa is the largest Chadic language by native speakers, and is spoken by a large number of people as a lingua franca in Northern Nigeria.[36] It may have as many as 80 to 100 million first and second language speakers.[33] Eight other Chadic languages have around 100,000 speakers; other Chadic languages often have few speakers and may be endangered of going extinct.[37] Only about 40 Chadic languages have been fully described by linguists.[33]

Cushitic edit

There are about 30 Cushitic languages,[38] more if Omotic is included,[39] spoken around the Horn of Africa and in Sudan and Tanzania.[38] The Cushitic family is traditionally split into four branches: the single language of Beja (c. 3 million speakers), the Agaw languages, Eastern Cushitic, and Southern Cushitic.[40][38] Only one Cushitic language, Oromo, has more than 25 million speakers; other languages with more than a million speakers include Somali, Saho-Afar, Hadiyya, and Sidaama.[38] Many Cushitic languages have relatively few speakers.[39] Cushitic does not appear to be related to the written ancient languages known from its area, Meroitic or Old Nubian.[41] The oldest text in a Cushitic language probably dates from around 1770;[38] written orthographies were only developed for a select number of Cushitic languages in early 20th century.[39]

Egyptian edit

 
Seal impression from the tomb of Seth-Peribsen (c. 2690 BCE), containing the first complete sentence in Ancient Egyptian.[42]

The Egyptian branch consists of a single language, Ancient Egyptian, which was historically spoken in the lower Nile Valley.[43] Egyptian is first attested in writing around 3000 BCE and finally went extinct around 1300 CE, making it the language with the longest written history in the world.[30] Egyptian is usually divided into two major periods, Earlier Egyptian (c. 3000–1300 BCE), which is further subdivided into Old Egyptian and Middle Egyptian, and Later Egyptian (1300 BCE-1300 CE), which is further subdivided into Late Egyptian, Demotic, and Coptic.[43] Coptic is the only stage written alphabetically to show vowels, whereas Egyptian was previously written in Egyptian hieroglyphs, which only represent consonants.[44] In the Coptic period, there is evidence for six major dialects, which presumably existed previously but are obscured by pre-Coptic writing; additionally, Middle Egyptian appears to be based on a different dialect than Old Egyptian, which in turn shows dialectal similarities to Late Egyptian.[45] Egyptian was replaced by Arabic as the spoken language of Egypt,[46] but Coptic continues to be the liturgical language of the Coptic Orthodox Church.[47]

Omotic edit

The c. 30 Omotic languages are still mostly undescribed by linguists.[35] They are all spoken in southwest Ethiopia except for the Ganza language, spoken in Sudan.[48] Omotic is typically split into North Omotic (or Aroid) and South Omotic, with the latter more influenced by the Nilotic languages; it is unclear whether the Dizoid group of Omotic languages belongs to the Northern or Southern group.[35] The two Omotic languages with the most speakers are Wolaitta and Gamo-Gofa-Dawro, with about 1.2 million speakers each.[39]

A majority of specialists consider Omotic to constitute a sixth branch of Afroasiatic.[4] Omotic was formerly considered part of the Cushitic branch;[49] some scholars continue to consider it part of Cushitic.[50] Other scholars have questioned whether it is Afroasiatic at all, due its lack of several typical aspects of Afroasiatic morphology.[4]

Semitic edit

There are between 40 and 80 languages in the Semitic family.[51] Today, Semitic languages are spoken across North Africa, West Asia, and the Horn of Africa, as well as on the island of Malta, making them the sole Afroasiatic branch with members originating outside Africa.[52][51] Arabic, spoken in both Asia and Africa, is by far the most widely spoken Afroasiatic language today,[2] with around 300 million native speakers, while the Ethiopian Amharic has around 25 million.[5]

Most authorities divide Semitic into two branches: East Semitic, which includes the extinct Akkadian language and West Semitic, which includes Arabic, Aramaic, the Canaanite languages (including Hebrew), as well as the Ethiopian Semitic languages such as Ge'ez and Amharic.[53] The classification within West Semitic remains contested. The only group with an African origin is Ethiopian Semitic.[51] The oldest written attestations of Semitic languages come from Mesopotamia, Northern Syria, and Egypt and date as early as c. 3000 BCE.[52]

Other proposed branches edit

There there are also other proposed branches, but none has so far convinced a majority of scholars:[10]

  • Linguist H. Fleming proposed that the near-extinct Ongota language is a separate branch of Afroasiatic;[54] however, this is only one of several competing theories.[4][49] About half of current scholarly hypotheses on Ongota's origins align it with Afroasiatic in some way.[55]
  • Robert Hetzron proposed that Beja is not part of Cushitic, but a separate branch.[56] The prevailing opinion, however, is that Beja is a branch of Cushitic.[57]
  • The extinct Meroitic language has been proposed to represent a branch of Afroasiatic.[58] Although an Afroasiatic connection is sometimes viewed as refuted, it continues to be defended by scholars such as Edward Lipiński.[59]
  • The Kujarge language is usually considered part of the Chadic languages;[60] however, Roger Blench has proposed that it may be a separate branch of Afroasiatic.[61][62]

Further subdivisions edit

Some proposed Afroasiatic subdivisions[a]
Fleming 1983 Ehret 1995 Bender 1997 Diakonoff 1988 Militarev 2005
  • Omotic
  • Afroasiatic
    • Semitic
    • Old East Africa Cushitic[b]
    • Erythraic
      • Cushitic[c]
      • Beja
      • Egyptian
      • Berber-Chadic
        • Berber
        • Chadic
  • Omotic
  • Erythraean
    • Cushitic
    • North Erythrean
      • Chadic
      • Boreafrasian
        • Egyptian
        • Berber
        • Semitic
  • Omotic
  • Chadic
  • Central Afroasiatic
    • Egyptian
    • Macro-Cushtic
      • Berber
      • Cushitic
      • Semitic
  • East–West Afrasian
    • Semitic
    • Cushitic
    • Berber (Berbero-Libyan)
  • North-South Afrasian
    • Egyptian
    • Chadic
    • Omotic
  • Cushomotic
    • Cushitic
    • Omotic
  • North Afrasian
    • Semitic
    • African North Afrasian
      • Egyptian
      • Chado-Berber
        • Chadic
        • Berber

There is no agreement on the relationships between and subgrouping of the different Afroasiatic branches.[58] Whereas Marcel Cohen (1947) claimed he saw no evidence for internal subgroupings, numerous other scholars have made proposals,[63] with Carsten Peust counting 27 as of 2012.[64]

Common trends in proposals as of 2019 include using common or lacking grammatical features to argue that Omotic was the first language to branch off, often followed by Chadic.[65] In contrast to scholars who argue for an early split of Chadic from Afroasiatic, scholars of the Russian school tend to argue that Chadic and Egyptian are closely related,[66] and scholars who rely on percentage of shared lexicon often group Chadic with Berber.[67] Three scholars who agree on an early split between Omotic and the other subbranches, but little else, are Harold Fleming (1983), Christopher Ehret (1995), and Lionel Bender (1997).[68] In contrast, scholars relying on shared lexicon often produce a Cushitic-Omotic group.[67] Additionally, the minority of scholars who favor an Asian origin of Afroasiatic tend to place Semitic as the first branch to split off.[69] Disagreement on which features are innovative and which are inherited from Proto-Afroasiatic produces radically different trees, as can be seen by comparing the trees produced by Ehret and Igor Diakonoff.[70]

Responding to the above, Tom Güldemann criticizes attempts at finding subgroupings based on common or lacking morphology by arguing that the presence or absence of morphological features is not a useful way of discerning subgroupings in Afroasiatic, because it can not be excluded that families currently lacking certain features did not have them in the past; this also means that the presence of morphological features cannot be taken as defining a subgroup.[71] Peust notes that other factors that can obscure genetic relationships between languages include the poor state of present documentation and understanding of particular language families (historically with Egyptian, presently with Omotic).[72] Gene Gragg likewise argues that more needs to be known about Omotic still, and that Afroasiatic linguists have still not found convincing isoglosses on which to base genetic distinctions.[65]

One way of avoiding the problem of determining which features are original and which are inherited is to use a computational methodology such as lexicostatistics, with one of the earliest attempts being Fleming 1983.[69] This is also the method used by Alexander Militarev and Sergei Starostin to create a family tree.[73][74] Fleming (2006) was a more recent attempt by Fleming, with a different result from Militarev and Starostin.[72] Hezekiah Bacovcin and David Wilson argue that this methodology is invalid for discerning linguistic sub-relationship.[70] They note the method's inability to detect various strong commonalities even between well-studied branches of AA.[75]

Classification history edit

A relationship between Hebrew, Arabic, and Aramaic and the Berber languages was perceived as early as the 9th century CE by the Hebrew grammarian and physician Judah ibn Quraysh, who is regarded as a forerunner of Afroasiatic studies.[76] The French orientalist Guillaume Postel had also pointed out similarities between Hebrew, Arabic, and Aramaic in 1538, and Hiob Ludolf noted similarities also to Ge'ez and Amharic in 1701. This family was formally described and named "Semitic" by August Ludwig von Schlözer in 1781.[77] In 1844, Theodor Benfey first described the relationship between Semitic and the Egyptian language and connected both to the Berber and the Cushitic languages (which he called "Ethiopic").[76] In the same year T.N. Newman suggested a relationship between Semitic and the Hausa language, an idea that was taken up by early scholars of Afroasiatic.[12] In 1855, Ernst Renan named these languages, related to Semitic but not Semitic, "Hamitic," in 1860 Carl Lottner proposed that they belonged to a single language family, and in 1876 Friedrich Müller first described them as a "Hamito-Semitic" language family.[16] Müller assumed that there existed a distinct "Hamitic" branch of the family that consisted of Egyptian, Berber, and Cushitic.[77] He did not include the Chadic languages, though contemporary Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius argued for the relation of Hausa to the Berber languages.[78] Some scholars would continue to regard Hausa as related to the other Afroasiatic languages, but the idea was controversial: many scholars refused to admit that the largely unwritten, "Negroid" Chadic languages were in the same family as the "Caucasian" ancient civilizations of the Egyptians and Semites.[79][80]

 
Distribution of ethnic groups in Africa (Afroasiatic/Hamito-Semitic-speaking in yellow)

An important development in the history of Afroasiatic scholarship – and the history of African linguistics – was the creation of the "Hamitic theory" or "Hamitic hypothesis" by Lepsius, fellow Egyptologist Christian Bunsen, and linguist Christian Bleek.[81] This theory connected the "Hamites", the originators of Hamitic languages, with (supposedly culturally superior) "Caucasians", who were assumed to have migrated into Africa and intermixed with indigenous "Negroid" Africans in ancient times.[58] The "Hamitic theory" would serve as the basis for Carl Meinhof's highly influential classification of African languages in his 1912 book Die Sprache der Hamiten.[82] On one hand, the "Hamitic" classification was justified partially based on linguistic features: for example, Meinhof split the presently-understood Chadic family into "Hamito-Chadic", and an unrelated non-Hamitic "Chadic" based on which languages possessed grammatical gender.[80] On the other hand, the classification also relied on non-linguistic anthropological and culturally contingent features, such as skin color, hair type, and lifestyle.[83] Ultimately, Meinhof's classification of Hamitic proved to include languages from every presently-recognized language family within Africa.[78]

The first scholar to question the existence of "Hamitic languages" was Marcel Cohen in 1924,[19] with skepticism also expressed by A. Klingenheben and Dietrich Westermann during the 1920s and '30s.[58] However, Meinhof's "Hamitic" classification remained prevalent throughout the early 20th century until it was definitively disproven by Joseph Greenberg in the 1940s, based on racial and anthropological data.[80][84] Instead, Greenberg proposed an Afroasiatic family consisting of five branches: Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, Egyptian, and Semitic.[58][85][19] Reluctance among some scholars to recognize Chadic as a branch of Afroasiatic persisted as late as the 1980s.[80] In 1969, Harold Fleming proposed that a group of languages classified by Greenberg as Cushitic were in fact their own independent "Omotic" branch—a proposal that has been widely, if not universally, accepted.[58] These six branches now constitute an academic consensus on the genetic structure of the family.[86]

Greenberg relied on his own method of mass comparison of vocabulary items rather than the comparative method of demonstrating regular sound correspondences to establish the family.[87] An alternative classification, based on the pronominal and conjugation systems, was proposed by A.N. Tucker in 1967.[88] As of 2023, widely accepted sound correspondences between the different branches have not yet been firmly established.[89][90] Nevertheless, morphological traits attributable to the proto-language and the establishment of cognates throughout the family have confirmed its genetic validity.[91][9]

Origin edit

Timeline edit

There is no consensus as to when Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken.[43] The absolute latest date for when Proto-Afroasiatic could have been extant is c. 4000 BCE, after which Egyptian and the Semitic languages are firmly attested. However, in all likelihood these languages began to diverge well before this hard boundary.[65] The estimations offered by scholars as to when Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken vary widely, ranging from 18,000 BCE to 8,000 BCE.[43] An estimate at the youngest end of this range still makes Afroasiatic the oldest proven language family.[6] Contrasting proposals of an early emergence, Tom Güldemann has argued that less time may have been required for the divergence than is usually assumed, as it is possible for a language to rapidly restructure due to areal contact, with the evolution of Chadic (and likely also Omotic) serving as pertinent examples.[92]

Location edit

Likewise, no consensus exists as to where proto-Afroasiatic originated.[43] Scholars have proposed locations for the Afroasiatic homeland across Africa and West Asia.[93] Roger Blench writes that the debate possesses "a strong ideological flavor", with associations between an Asian origin and "high civilization".[69] An additional complicating factor is the lack of agreement on the subgroupings of Afroasiatic (see Further subdivisions) – this makes associating archaeological evidence with the spread of Afroasiatic particularly difficult.[94] Nevertheless, there is a long-accepted link between the speakers of Proto-Southern Cushitic languages and the East African Savanna Pastoral Neolithic (5,000 years ago), and archaeological evidence associates the Proto-Cushitic speakers with economic transformations in the Sahara dating c. 8,500 ago, as well as the speakers of the Proto-Zenati variety of the Berber languages with an expansion across the Maghreb in the 5th century CE.[95]

An origin somewhere on the African continent has broad scholarly support,[65] and is seen as being well-supported by the linguistic data.[96] Most scholars more narrowly place the homeland near the geographic center of its present distribution,[18] "in the southeastern Sahara or adjacent Horn of Africa."[97] The Afroasiatic languages spoken in Africa are not more closely related to each other than they are to Semitic, as one would expect if only Semitic had remained in an West Asian homeland while all other branches had spread from there.[98] Likewise, all Semitic languages are fairly similar to each other, whereas the African branches of Afroasiatic are very diverse; this suggests the rapid spread of Semitic out of Africa.[65] Proponents of an origin of Afroasiatic within Africa assume the proto-language to have been spoken by pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherers,[92] arguing that there is no evidence of words in Proto-Afroasiatic related to agriculture or animal husbandry.[97] Christopher Ehret, S.O. Y. Keita, and Paul Newman also argue that archaeology does not indicate a spread of migrating farmers into Africa, but rather a gradual incorporation of animal husbandry into indigenous foraging cultures.[99] Ehret, in a separate publication, argued that the two principles in linguistic approaches for determining the origin of languages which are the principles of fewest moves and greatest diversity had put “beyond reasonable doubt” that the language family “had originated in the Horn of Africa”.[100]

A significant minority of scholars supports an Asian origin of Afroasiatic,[69] most of whom are specialists in Semitic or Egyptian studies.[101] The main proponent of an Asian origin is the linguist Alexander Militarev,[102] who argues that Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken by early agriculturalists in the Levant and subsequently spread to Africa.[43] Militarev associates the speakers of Proto-Afroasiatic with the Levantine Post-Natufian Culture, arguing that the reconstructed lexicon of flora and fauna, as well as farming and pastoralist vocabulary indicates that Proto-AA must have been spoken in this area.[103][104] Scholar Jared Diamond and archaeologist Peter Bellwood have taken up Militarev's arguments as part of their general argument that the spread of linguistic macrofamilies (such as Indo-European, Bantu, and Austro-Asiatic) can be associated with the development of agriculture; they argue that there is clear archaeological support for farming spreading from the Levant into Africa via the Nile valley.[105]

Phonological characteristics edit

Speech sample in Shilha (Berber branch)
Speech sample in the Semitic Neo-Aramaic language, a descendant of Old Aramaic
Speech sample in Somali (Cushitic branch)
Speech sample in Classical Arabic (Semitic branch)

Afroasiatic languages share a number of phonetic and phonological features.[106]

Syllable structure edit

Egyptian, Cushitic, Berber, Omotic, and most languages in the Semitic branch all require a syllable to begin with a consonant (with the exception of some grammatical prefixes).[107] Igor Diakonoff argues that this constraint goes back to Proto-Afroasiatic.[108] Some Chadic languages allow a syllable to begin with a vowel,[107] however in many Chadic languages verbs must begin with a consonant. In Cushitic and Chadic languages, a glottal stop or glottal fricative may be inserted to prevent a word from beginning with a vowel.[63] Typically, syllables only begin with a single consonant.[109]

With the exception of some Chadic languages, all Afroasiatic languages allow both closed and open syllables; many Chadic languages do not allow a syllable to end in a consonant.[110] Most words end in a vowel in Omotic and Cushitic, making syllable-final consonant clusters rare.[109] Diakonoff argues that proto-Afroasiatic syllables disallowed consonant clusters or vowels at the end of a syllable.[108]

Syllable weight plays an important role in AA, especially in Chadic; it can affect the form of affixes attached to a word.[111]

Consonant systems edit

Several Afroasiatic languages have large consonant inventories, and it is likely that this is inherited from proto-Afroasiatic.[112] All Afroasiatic languages contain stops and fricatives; some branches have additional types of consonants such as affricates and lateral consonants.[113] AA languages tend to have pharyngeal fricative consonants, with Egyptian, Semitic, Berber, and Cushitic sharing ħ and ʕ.[114] In all AA languages, consonants can be bilabial, alveolar, velar, and glottal, with additional places of articulation found in some branches or languages.[113] Additionally, the glottal stop (ʔ) usually exists as a phoneme, and there tends to be no phonemic contrast between [p] and [f] or [b] and [v].[114] In Cushitic, the Ethiopian Semitic language Tigrinya, and some Chadic languages, there is no underlying phoneme [p] at all.[115]

Most, if not all branches of Afroasiatic distinguish between voiceless, voiced, and "emphatic" consonants.[116][d] The emphatic consonants are typically formed deeper in the throat than the others;[114] they can be realized variously as glottalized, pharyngealized, uvularized, ejective, and/or implosive consonants in the different branches.[116] It is generally agreed that only the obstruents had a contrast between voiceless and voiced forms in Proto-Afroasiatic, whereas continuants were voiceless.[118]

A form of long-distance consonant assimilation known as consonant harmony is attested in Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, and Semitic: it usually affects features such as pharyngealization, palatalization, and labialization.[119] Several Omotic languages have "sibilant harmony", meaning that all sibilants (s, sh, z, ts, etc.) in a word must match.[120]

Consonant incompatibility edit

Examples of root consonant incompatibilities from Egyptian, after Allen 2020a
consonant cannot occur with
p b, f, m, h
r ꜣ, b
h, ḥ, ẖ, q, k, g, ṯ, ḏ
s ḥ, z
t ꜥ, z, q, g, d, ḏ

Restrictions against the co-occurrence of certain, usually similar, consonants in verbal roots can be found in all Afroasiatic branches, though they are only weakly attested in Chadic and Omotic.[121] The most widespread constraint is against two different labial consonants (other than w) occurring together in a root, a constraint which can be found in all branches but Omotic.[122] Another widespread constraint is against two non-identical lateral obstruents, which can be found in Egyptian, Chadic, Semitic, and probably Cushitic.[123] Such rules do not always apply for nouns, numerals, or denominal verbs, and do not affect prefixes or suffixes added to the root.[124] Roots that may have contained sequences that were possible in Proto-Afroasiatic but are disallowed in the daughter languages are assumed to have undergone consonant dissimilation or assimilation.[125][126]

A set of constraints, developed originally by Joseph Greenberg on the basis of Arabic, has been claimed to be typical for Afroasiatic languages.[127] Greenberg divided Semitic consonants into four types: "back consonants" (glottal, pharyngeal, uvular, laryngeal, and velar consonants), "front consonants" (dental or alveolar consonants), liquid consonants, and labial consonants. He showed that, generally, any consonant from one of these groups could combine with consonants from any other group, but could not be used together with consonants from the same group.[124] Additionally, he showed that Proto-Semitic restricted a sequence of two identical consonants in the first and second position of the triliteral root.[128] These rules also have a number of exceptions:

  1. velar consonants can occur with pharyngeals or laryngeals;[129]
  2. dental consonants can co-occur with sibilants;[130] However, there are no Proto-Semitic verbal roots with and a sibilant, and roots with d and a sibilant are uncommon. In all attested cases of a dental and a sibilant, the sibilant occurs in first position and the dental in second.[129]

Similar exceptions can be demonstrated for the other AA branches that have these restrictions to their root formation.[130] James P. Allen has demonstrated that slightly different rules apply to Egyptian: for instance, Egyptian allows two identical consonants in some roots, and disallows velars from occurring with pharyngeals.[131]

Vowel systems edit

There is a large variety of vocalic systems in AA,[114] and attempts to reconstruct the vocalic system of Proto-Afroasiatic vary considerably.[118] All branches of Afroasiatic have a limited number of underlying vowels (between two and seven), but the number of phonetic vowels can be much larger. The quality of the underlying vowels varies considerably by language; the most common vowel throughout AA is schwa.[132] In the different languages, central vowels are often inserted to break up consonant clusters (a form of epenthesis).[114] Various Semitic, Cushitic, Berber, and Chadic languages, including Arabic, Amharic, Berber, Somali, and East Dangla, also exhibit various types of vowel harmony.[133]

Tones edit

The majority of AA languages are tonal languages: phonemic tonality is found in Omotic, Chadic, and Cushitic languages, but absent in Berber and Semitic. There is no information on whether Egyptian had tones.[134] In contemporary Omotic, Chadic, and Cushitic languages, tone is primarily a grammatical feature: it encodes various grammatical functions, only differentiating lexical roots in a few cases.[135] In some Chadic and some Omotic languages every syllable has to have a tone, whereas in most Cushitic languages this is not the case.[136] Some scholars postulate that Proto-Afroasiatic may have had tone, while others believe it arose later from a pitch accent.[134]

Examples of tones marking lexical and morphological changes in some AA languages, after Frajzyngier 2012
Language Examples
Somali (Cushitic) díbi bull, absolutive case dibi bull, nominative case dibí bull, genitive case
ínan, boy inán girl
Bench (Omotic) k'áyts' work! do it! (active imperative) k'àyts' be done! (passive imperative)
Hausa (Chadic) màatáa woman, wife máatáa women, wives
dáfàa to cook (infinitive) dàfáa cook! (imperative)

Similarities in grammar, syntax, and morphology edit

At present, there is no generally accepted reconstruction of Proto-Afroasiatic grammar, syntax, or morphology, nor one for any of the sub-branches besides Egyptian. This means that it is difficult to know which features in Afroasiatic languages are retentions, and which are innovations.[137] Moreover, all Afroasiatic languages have long been in contact with other language families and with each other, leading to the possibility of widespread borrowing both within Afroasiatic and from unrelated languages.[138] There are nevertheless a number of commonly observed features in Afroasiatic morphology and derivation, including the use of suffixes, infixes, vowel lengthening and shortening as a morphological change, as well as the use of tone changes to indicate morphology.[139] Further commonalities and differences are explored in more detail below.

General features edit

Consonantal root structures edit

A widely attested feature in AA languages is a consonantal structure into which various vocalic "templates" are placed.[134] This structure is particularly visible in the verbs,[140] and is particularly noticeable in Semitic.[134] Besides for Semitic, vocalic templates are well attested for Cushitic and Berber,[141] where, along with Chadic, it is less productive; it is absent in Omotic.[134] For Egyptian, evidence for the root-and-template structure exists from Coptic.[141] In Semitic, Egyptian, Berber, verbs have no inherent vowels at all; the vowels found in a given stem are dependent on the vocalic template.[142] In Chadic, verb stems can include an inherent vowel as well.[63]

Most Semitic verbs are triliteral (have three consonants), whereas most Chadic, Omotic, and Cushitic verbs are biliteral (having two consonants).[143] The degree to which the Proto-AA verbal root was triliteral is debated.[92] It may have originally been mostly biconsonantal, to which various affixes (such as verbal extensions) were then added and lexicalized.[134] Although any root could theoretically be used to create a noun or a verb, there is evidence for the existence of distinct noun and verb roots, which behave in different ways.[144]

Examples of verbal templates in AA languages, after Gragg 2019
Language Akkadian (Semitic) Berber Beja (Cushitic) Ron/Daffo (Chadic) Coptic (Egyptian)
Root p-r-s to divide k-n-f to roast d-b-l to gather m-(w)-t to die k-t to build
Templates iprus- (preterite) ǎknəf (aorist) -dbil- (past) mot (perfective) kôt (infintive)
iparras- (present) əknǎf (perfective) -i:-dbil- (aorist) mwaát (imperfective) kêt (qualitative)
iptaras (perfect) əkǎnnǎf (imperfective) i:-dbil- (modal)
əknəf (neg. perfective) da:n-bi:l (present sg)
əkənnəf (neg. imperfective) -e:-dbil- (present pl)
-dabi:l- (negative)

As part of these templates, the alternation (apophony) between high vowels (e.g. i, u) and a low vowel (a) in verbal forms is usually described as one of the main characteristics of AA languages: this change codes a variety of different functions.[145] It is unclear whether this system is a common AA trait;[146] the Chadic examples, for instance, show signs of originally deriving from affixes, which could explain the origins of the alterations in other languages as well.[145]

Word order edit

It remains unclear what word order Proto-Afroasiatic had.[93][147] Berber, Egyptian, and most Semitic languages are verb-initial languages, whereas Cushitic, Omotic and some Semitic subgroups are verb-final languages.[148] Proto-Chadic is reconstructed as having verb-initial word order,[96] but most Chadic languages have subject-verb-object word order.[147]

Reduplication and gemination edit

Afroasiatic Languages use the processes of reduplication and gemination (which often overlap in meaning) to derive nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs throughout the AA language family. Gemination in particular is one of the typical features of AA.[149] Full or partial reduplication of the verb is often used to derive forms showing repeated action (pluractionality), though it is unclear if this is an inherited feature or has been widely borrowed.[150]

Nouns edit

Grammatical gender and number edit

Use of T on feminine nouns, using data from Souag 2023
Kabyle (Berber) Hausa (Chadic) Beja (Cushitic) Egyptian Arabic (Semitic)
wəl-t 'daughter' yārinyà-r̃ 'the girl' (r̃ < final -t)
ʔo:(r)-t 'a daughter'
t-ʔo:r 'the daughter'
zꜣ-t 'daughter' bin-t 'daughter'

The assignment of nouns and pronouns to either masculine or feminine gender is present in all branches – but not all languages – of the Afroasiatic family.[151] This sex-based gender system is widely agreed to derive from Proto-Afroasiatic.[148] In most branches, gender is an inherent property of nouns.[152] Additionally, even when nouns are not cognates, they tend to have the same gender throughout Afroasiatic ("gender stability").[153] In Egyptian, Semitic, and Berber, a feminine suffix -t is attested to mark feminine nouns; in some Cushitic and Chadic languages, a feminine -t suffix or prefix (lexicalized from a demonstrative) is used to mark definiteness.[154] In addition to these uses, -t also functions as a diminutive, pejorative, and/or singulative marker in some languages.[151]

Some examples of internal plurals in AA, using data from Gragg 2019 and Meyer & Wolff 2019
Language Meaning Singular Plural
Ge'ez (Semitic) king nɨgus nägäs-t
Teshelhiyt (Berber) country ta-mazir-t ti-mizar
Afar (Cushitic) body galab galo:b-a
Hausa (Chadic) stream gulbi gulà:be:
Mubi (Chadic) eye irin aràn

Afroasiatic languages have a variety of ways of marking plurals; in some branches, nouns change gender from singular to plural (gender polarity),[153] while in others, plural forms are ungendered.[155] In addition to marking plurals via a number of affixes (with the suffixes -*uu/-*w and -*n(a) widely attested), several AA languages make use of internal vowel change (apophony) and/or insertion (epenthesis).[156] These so-called "internal a" or "broken" plurals are securely attested in Semitic, Berber, Cushitic, and Chadic, although it is unclear if the Chadic examples are an independent development.[157][e] Another common method of forming plurals is reduplication.[159]

Noun cases and states edit

Subject-Object case marking in some AA branches, using data in Gragg 2019, Huehnergard 2011 and Bender 2000
Case Oromo (Cushitic) Berber Akkadian (Semitic) Wolaitta (Omotic)
Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine
Nominative/bound nam-(n)i boy intal-t-i girl u-frux boy t-frux-t girl šarr-u-m king šarr-at-u-m queen keett-i house macci-yo woman
Accusative/absolutive/unbound nam-a intal-a a-frux t-a-frux-t šarr-a-m šarr-at-a-m keett-a macci-ya

Nouns cases are found in the Semitic, Berber, Cushitic, and Omotic branches. They are not found in Chadic languages, and there is no evidence for cases in Egyptian.[160] A common pattern in AA languages with case is for the nominative to be marked by -u or -i, and the accusative to be marked by -a.[161] However, the number and types of cases varies across AA and also within the individual branches.[160] Some languages in AA have a marked nominative alignment, a feature which may date back to Proto-Afroasiatic.[162][163] Zygmont Frajzyngier states that a general characteristic of case marking in AA languages is that it tends to mark roles such as genitive, dative, locative, etc. rather than the subject and object.[164]

Noun states in different AA branches, using data from Allen 2020, Lipiński 2001, Mous 2012, and Kossmann 2012
Language Free/absolute state Construct State Additional state
Aramaic (Semitic) malkā(h) queen malkat Emphatic: malkətā
Coptic (Egyptian) jôj head jaj- Pronominal: jô-
Iraqw (Cushitic) afee mouths afé-r
Riffian (Berber) a-ryaz man Annexed: wə-ryaz

A second category, which partially overlaps with case, is the AA linguistic category of "state." Linguists use the term "state" to refer to different things in different languages. In Cushitic and Semitic, nouns exist in the "free state" or the "construct state". The construct state is a special, usually reduced form of a noun, which is used when the noun is possessed by another noun (Semitic) or is modified by an adjective or relative clause (Cushitic). [165] Edward Lipiński refers to Semitic nouns as having four states: absolute (free/indeterminate), construct, determinate, and predicate.[166] Coptic and Egyptian grammar also refers to nouns having a "free" (absolute) state, a "construct state," and a "pronominal state." The construct state is used when a noun becomes unstressed as the first element of a compound, whereas the pronominal state is used when the noun has a suffixed possessive pronoun.[167][168] Berber instead contrasts between the "free state" and the "annexed state," the latter of which is used for a variety of purposes, including for subjects placed after a verb and after certain prepositions.[169]

Modifiers and agreement edit

There is no strict distinction between adjectives, nouns, and adverbs in Afroasaiatic.[170] All branches of Afroasiatic have a lexical category of adjectives except for Chadic;[159] some Chadic languages do have adjectives, however. In Berber languages, adjectives are rare and are mostly replaced by nouns of quality and stative verbs. [171] In different languages, adjectives (and other modifiers) must either precede or follow the noun.[172] In most AA languages, numerals precede the noun.[171]

In those languages that have adjectives, they can take gender and number markings, which, in some cases, agree with the gender and number of the noun they are modifying.[159] However, in Omotic, adjectives do not agree with nouns: sometimes, they only but take gender and number marking only when they are used as nouns, in other cases, they take gender and number marking only when they follow the noun (the noun then receives no marking).[173]

Masculine, Feminine, Plural agreement patterns in N T N, using data from Greenberg 1960[f]
Language meaning Masculine Feminine Plural[g]
Old South Arabian (Semitic) this ð-n ð-t ʔl-n
Egyptian this (p-n) t-n n-n
Beja (Cushitic) this be-n be-t bal-īn
Tuareg (Berber) relative verb form ilkəm-ən təlkəm-ət ilkəm-ən-in
Hausa (Chadic) possessive base na- ta- na-

A widespread pattern of gender and number marking in Afroasiatic, found on demonstratives, articles, adjectives, and relative markers, is a consonant N for masculine, T for feminine, and N for plural. This can be found in Semitic, Egyptian, Beja, Berber, and Chadic.[174][154] A system K (masculine), T (feminine), and H (plural) can be found in Cushitic, Chadic, with masculine K also appearing in Omotic.[118][116] The feminine marker T is one of the most consistent aspects across the different branches of AA.[153]

Verb forms edit

Tenses, aspects, and moods (TAMs) edit

There is no agreement about which tenses, aspects, or moods (TAMs) Proto-Afroasiatic might have had.[175] Most grammars of AA posit a distinction between perfective and imperfective verbal aspects, which can be found in Cushitic, Berber, Semitic, most Chadic languages, and some Omotic languages.[176] The Egyptian verbal system diverges greatly from that found in the other branches.[150] Additionally, it is common in Afroasiatic languages for the present/imperfective form to be a derived (marked) form of the verb, whereas in most other languages and language families the present tense is the default form of the verb.[177] Another common trait across the family is the use of a suppletive imperative for verbs of motion.[178]

"Prefix conjugation" edit

Conjugation of verbs using prefixes that mark person, number, and gender can be found in Semitic, Berber, and in Cushitic,[150][179] where it is only found on a small set of frequent verbs.[180] These prefixes are clearly cognate across the branches, although their use within the verbal systems of the individual languages varies.[179] There is a general pattern in which n- is used for the first person plural, whereas t- is used for all forms of the second person regardless of plurality or gender, as well as feminine singular.[181] Prefixes of ʔ- (glottal stop) for the first person singular and y- for the third person masculine can also be reconstructed.[182] As there is no evidence for the "prefix conjugation" in Omotic, Chadic, or Egyptian, it is unclear whether this was a Proto-Afroasiatic feature that has been lost in those branches or is a shared innovation among Semitic, Berber, and Cushitic.[140][181][h]

The "prefix conjugation" in Afroasiatic, following Gragg 2019
Number Person Gender Akkadian (Semitic) Berber Beja (Cushitic)
Preterite Present Aorist Imperfective "Old Past" "Old Present" "New Present"
Singular 1 a-prus a-parras ăknəf-ăʕ əkănnăf-ăʕ ʔ-i:-dbíl ʔ-a-dbíl ʔ-a-danbí:l
2 m ta-prus ta-parras t-ăknəf-ət t-əkănnăf-ət t-i:-dbíl-a t-i-dbíl-a danbí:l-a
f ta-prus-i: ta-parras-i t-i:-dbíl-i t-i-dbíl-i danbí:l-i
3 m i-prus i-parras y-ăknəf y-əkănnăf ʔ-i:-dbíl ʔ-i-dbíl danbí:l
f ta-prus ta-parras t-ăknəf t-əkănnăf t-i:-dbíl t-i-dbíl
Plural 1 ni-prus ni-parras n-ăknəf n-əkănnăf n-i:-dbíl n-i-dbíl n-e:-dbíl
2 m ta-prus-a: a-parras t-ăknəf-ăm t-əkănnăf-ăm t-i:-dbíl-na t-i-dbíl-na t-e:-dbíl-na
f ta-parras t-ăknəf-măt t-əkănnăf-măt
3 m i-prus-u: ta-parras-i: ăknəf-ăn əkănnăf-ăn ʔ-i:-dbíl ʔ-i-dbíl ʔ-e:-dbíl-na
f i-prus-a: i-parras ăknəf-năt əkănnăf-năt

"Suffix conjugation" edit

Some AA branches have what is called a "suffix conjugation", formed by adding pronominal suffixes to indicate person, gender, and number to a verbal adjective.[150][184] In Akkadian, Egyptian, Berber, and Cushitic this forms a "stative conjugation", used to express the state or result of an action; the same endings as in Akkadian and Egyptian are also present in the West Semitic perfective verb form.[185][186] In Akkadian and Egyptian, the suffixes appear to be reduced forms of the independent pronouns (see Pronouns); the obvious correspondence between the endings in the two branches has been argued to show that Egyptian and Semitic are closely related.[187] While some scholars posit an AA origin for this form, it is possible that the Berber and Cushitic forms are independent developments,[150] as they show significant differences from the Egyptian and Semitic forms. The Cushitic forms in particular may be derived from morphology found in subordinate clauses.[179]

The "suffix conjugation" in Afroasiatic, following Gragg 2019
Number Person Gender Akkadian (Semitic) Egyptian Berber Afar (Cushitic)
Singular 1 pars-a:ku sḏm-kw măttit-ăʕ miʕ-iyo-h
2 m pars-a:ta sḏm-tj măttit-ət miʕ-ito-h
f pars-a:ti
3 m paris sḏm-w măttit meʕ-e-h
f pars-at sḏm-tj măttit-ăt
Plural 1 pars-a:nu sḏm-wjn măttit-it miʕ-ino-h
2 m pars-a:tunu sḏm-tjwnj miʕ-ito:nu-h
f pars-a:tina
3 m pars-u: sḏm-wj moʕ-o:nu-h
f pars-a:

Common derivational affixes edit

M-prefix noun derivation edit

A prefix in m- is the most widely attested affix in AA that is used to derive nouns,[153][188] and is one the features Joseph Greenberg used to diagnose membership in the family. It forms agent nouns, place nouns, and instrument nouns.[118][56] In some branches, it can also derive abstract nouns and participles.[188] Omotic, meanwhile, shows evidence for a non-productive prefix mV- associated with the feminine gender.[189] Christopher Ehret has argued that this prefix is a later development that was not present in Proto-Afro-Asiatic, but rather derived from a PAA indefinite pronoun *m-.[190] Such an etymology is rejected by A. Zaborski and Gábor Takács, the latter of whom argues for a PAA *ma- that unites all or some of the meanings in the modern languages.[191]

Examples of m-prefix noun derivations, using data from Meyer & Wolff 2019, Beylage 2018, and Wilson 2020
Language Root Agent/Instrument Place/Abstract
Egyptian swr to drink m-swr drinking bowl
Arabic (Semitic) k-t-b to write mu-katib-un writer ma-ktab-un school
Hausa (Chadic) hayf- to give birth má-hàif-íi father má-háif-áa birthplace
Beja (Cushitic) firi to give birth mi-frey birth
Tuareg (Berber) äks to eat em-äks eater

Verbal extensions edit

Common verbal extensions in Afroasiatic, using data from Wilson 2020, Bubenik 2023, and Kossmann 2007
Language Causative *s- Reflexive/middle *t- Passive *n-
Akkadian (Semitic) u-š-apris 'make cut' mi-t-gurum 'agree (with one another)' i-p-paris (> *i-n-paris) 'be cut'
Figuig (Berber) ssu-fəɣ 'let out' i-ttə-ska 'it has been built' mmu-bḍa 'divide oneself'
Beja (Cushitic) s-dabil 'make gather' t-dabil 'be gathered' m-dabaal 'gather each other'
Egyptian s-ꜥnḫ 'make live' pr-tj 'is sent forth'[i] n-hp 'escape'[j]

Many AA languages use prefixes or suffixes (verbal extensions) to encode various pieces of information about the verb.[194] Three derivational prefixes can be reconstructed for Proto-Afroasiatic: *s- 'causative', *t- 'middle voice' or 'reflexive', and *n- 'passive';[184] the prefixes appear with various related meanings in the individual daughter languages and branches.[195] Christopher Ehret has proposed that Proto-Afroasiatic originally had as many as thirty-seven separate verbal extensions, many of which then became fossilized as third consonants.[196] This theory has been criticized by some, such as Andrzej Zaborski and Alan Kaye, as being too many extensions to be realistic, though Zygmont Frajzyngier and Erin Shay note that some Chadic languages have as many as twelve extensions.[93]

"Nisba" derivation edit

The so-called "Nisba" is a suffix used to derive adjectives from nouns and, in Egyptian, also from prepositions.[197] It is found in Egyptian, Semitic, and possibly, in some relic forms, Berber.[198] The suffix has the same basic form in Egyptian and Semitic,[197] taking the form -i(y) in Semitic and being written -j in Egyptian. The Semitic and Cushitic genitive case in -i/-ii may be related to "nisba" adjective derivation.[199][158]

"Nisba" derivation in Semitic and Egyptian, using data from Wilson 2020 and Beylage 2018
Language Noun/preposition Derived adjective
Hebrew (Semitic) yārēaḥ moon yərēḥī lunar
Egyptian nṯr god nṯr.j divine
ḥr upon ḥr.j upper, which is upon

Due to its presence in the oldest attested and best-known AA branches, nisba derivation is often thought of as a "quintessentially Afroasiatic feature".[158][200] Christopher Ehret argues for its presence in Proto-Afroasiatic and for its attestation in some form in all branches, with a shape -*ay in addition to -*iy in some cases.[201]

Vocabulary comparison edit

Pronouns edit

The forms of the pronouns are very stable throughout Afroasiatic (excluding Omotic),[147] and they have been used as one of the chief tools for determining whether a language belongs to the family.[8] However, there is no consensus on what the reconstructed set of Afroasiatic pronouns might have looked like.[34] A common characteristic of AA languages is the existence of a special set of "independent" pronouns, which are distinct from subject pronouns. They can occur together with subject pronouns but cannot fulfill an object function.[202] Also common are dependent/affix pronouns (used for direct objects and to mark possession).[34] For most branches, the first person pronouns contain a nasal consonant (n, m), whereas the third person displays a sibilant consonant (s, sh).[203] Other commonalities are masculine and feminine forms used in both the second and third persons, except in Cushitic and Omotic.[147] These pronouns tend to show a masculine "u" and a feminine "i".[116] The Omotic forms of the personal pronouns differ from the others, with only the plural forms in North Omotic appearing potentially to be cognate.[204]

Pronouns in the Afroasiatic family, following Gragg 2019
Meaning North Omotic (Yemsa) Beja Cushitic (Baniamer) East Cushitic (Somali) West Chadic (Hausa) East Chadic (Mubi) Egyptian East Semitic (Akkadian) West Semitic (Arabic) Berber (Tashelhiyt)
'I' (ind.) aní aní-ga ni: ndé jnk ana:ku ʔana nkki
'me, my' (dep.) -ná-
-tá-
-u: -ʔe na -j
wj
-i:
-ya
-i:
-ni:
-i
'we' (ind.) ìnno hinín anná-ga
inná-ga
mu: ána
éné
jnn ni:nu: naħnu nkkwni
'you' (masc. sing. ind.) barú:k adí-ga kai kám nt-k at-ta ʔan-ta kiji
'you' (fem. sing. ind.) batú:k ke: kín nt-ṯ at-ti ʔan-ti kmmi (f)
'you' (masc. sing., dep.) -né- -ú:k(a) ku ka -k -ka -ka -k
'you' (fem. sing., dep.) -ú:k(i) ku ki -ṯ -ki -ki -m
'you' (plural, dep.) -nitì- -ú:kna idin ku ká(n) -ṯn -kunu (m)
-kina (f)
-kum (m)
-kunna (f)
-un (m)
-un-t (f)
'he' (ind.) bár barú:s isá-ga ši: ár nt-f šu ntta (m)
'she' (ind.) batú:s ijá-ga ita tír nt-s ši hiya ntta-t
'he' (dep.) -bá- -ūs ši à -f
sw
-šu -hu -s
'she' (dep.) ta -s
sy
-ša -ha:

Numerals edit

Unlike in the Indo-European or Austronesian language families, numerals in AA languages cannot be traced to a proto-system.[205][206] The Cushitic and Chadic numeral systems appear to have originally been base 5. The system in Berber, Egyptian, and Semitic, however, has independent words for the numbers 6–9.[207] Thus, it is possible that the numerals in Egyptian, Berber, and Semitic are more closely related, whereas the Cushitic and Chadic numerals are more closely related to each other.[208][209] Modern Chadic numeral systems are sometimes decimal, having separate names for the numbers 1–10, and sometimes base-5, deriving the numbers 6–9 from the numbers 1–5 in some way.[210] Some families show more than one word for a numeral: Chadic, Semitic, and Berber each have two words for two,[211][212] and Semitic has four words for one.[213] Andrzej Zaborski further notes that the numbers "one", "two", and "five" are particularly susceptible to replacement by new words, with "five" often based on a word meaning "hand".[205]

Another factor making comparisons of AA numeral systems difficult is the possibility of borrowing.[206] Only some Berber languages maintain the native Berber numeral system, with many using Arabic loans for higher numbers and some from any numeral beyond two.[214] In some Berber languages, the roots for one and two are also borrowed from Arabic.[215] Some South Cushitic numerals are borrowed from Nilotic languages, other Cushitic numerals have been borrowed from Ethiopian Semitic languages.[216]

Numerals from throughout Afroasiatic, using data from Blažek 2017, Blažek 2018, Lipiński 2001, and Frajzyngier & Shay 2012a
Meaning Egyptian Tuareg (Berber) Akkadian (East Semitic) Arabic (West Semitic) Beja (North Cushitic) West Central Oromo (Cushitic) Lele (East Chadic) Gidar (Central Chadic) Bench (North Omotic)
One m. wꜥ yiwən, yan, iğ ištēn wāḥid gáal tokko pínà tákà mat'
f. wꜥ.t yiwət, išt ištiāt wāḥida gáat
Two m. sn.wj sin, sən šinā ʔiṯnāni máloob lama súlà nam
f. sn.tj snat, sənt šittā ʔiṯnatāni máloot
Three m. ḫmt.w ḵraḍ, šaṛḍ šalāšat ṯalāṯa mháy sadii súbù hókù kaz
f. ḫmt.t ḵraṭt, šaṛṭ šalāš ṯalāṯ mháyt
Four m. (j)fd.w kkuẓ erbet(t) ʔarbaʕa faḍíg afur pórìn póɗó od
f. (j)fd.t kkuẓt erba ʔarbaʕ faḍígt
Five m. dj.w səmmus, afus ḫamšat ḫamsa áy šani bày ɬé ut͡ʃ
f. dj.t səmmust ḫamiš ḫams áyt
Six m sjs.w sḍis šiššet sitta aságwir jaha ménéŋ ɬré sapm
f. sjs.t sḍist šiš(š) sitt asagwitt
Seven m sfḫ.w sa sebet(t) sabʕa asarámaab tolba mátàlíŋ bùhúl napm
f. sfḫ.t sat seba sabʕ asarámaat
Eight m. ḫmn.w tam samānat ṯamāniya asúmhay saddet jurgù dòdòpórò nyartn
f. ḫmn.t tamt samānē ṯamānin asúmhayt
Nine m. psḏ.w tẓa tišīt tisʕa aššaḍíg sagal célà váyták irstn
f. psḏ.t tẓat tiše tisʕ aššaḍígt
Ten m. mḏ.w mraw ešeret ʕašara támin kuḍan gòrò kláù tam
f. mḏ.t mrawt ešer ʕašr támint

Cognates edit

Afroasiatic languages share a vocabulary of Proto-Afroasiatic origin to varying extents.[217] Writing in 2004, John Huehnergard notes the great difficulty in establishing cognate sets across the family.[184] Identifying cognates is difficult because the languages in question are often separated by thousands of years of development and many languages within the family have long been in contact with each other, raising the possibility of loanwords.[7] Work is also hampered because of the poor state of documentation of many languages.[218]

There are two etymological dictionaries of Afroasiatic, one by Christopher Ehret, and one by Vladimir Orel and Olga Stolbova, both from 1995. Both works provide highly divergent reconstructions and have been heavily criticized by other scholars.[219] Andrzej Zaborski refers to Orel and Stolbova's reconstructions as "controversial", and Ehret's as "not acceptable to many scholars".[10] Tom Güldemann argues that much comparative work in Afroasiatic suffers from not attempting first to reconstruct smaller units within the individual branches, but instead comparing words in the individual languages.[220] Nevertheless, both dictionaries agree on some items and some proposed cognates are uncontroversial.[7][184] Such cognates tend to rely on relatively simple sound correspondences.[112]

Some widely recognized cognates in Afroasiatic, following Hayward 2000, Gragg 2019, and Huehnergard 2004[k]
Meaning Proto-Afroasiatic Omotic Cushitic Chadic Egyptian Semitic Berber
Ehret 1995[l] Orel & Stolbova 1995
to strike, to squeeze *bak- Gamo bak- 'strike' Afar bak Wandala bak 'to strike, beat' bk 'kill (with a sword)' Arabic bkk 'to squeeze, tear' Tuareg bakkat 'to strike, pound'
blood *dîm-
*dâm-
*dam- Kaffa damo 'blood';
Aari zomʔi 'to blood'
(cf. Oromo di:ma 'red') Bolewa dom (cf. jdmj 'red linen') Akkadian damu 'blood' Ghadames dəmmm-ən 'blood'
food *kamaʔ- / *kamay- Afar okm- 'to eat' Hausa ka:ma:ma: 'snack';
Tumak ka:m 'mush'
kmj 'food'
to be old, elder *gâd-/gûd- *gad- Oromo gada 'age group, generation';
Burji gad-uwa 'old man'
Ngizim gad'e 'old' Arabic gadd- 'grandfather, ancestor'
to say *geh- *gay- Sheko ge 'to say';
Aari gai- 'to say'
Hausa gaya 'to say' ḏwj 'to call, say' (cf. Hebrew gʕy 'to shout')
tongue *lis'- 'to lick' *les- 'tongue' Kaffa mi-laso 'tongue' Mwaghavul liis tongue,
Gisiga eles 'tongue
ns 'tongue' Akkadian liša:nu 'tongue' Kabyle iləs 'tongue'
to die *maaw- *mawut- Rendille amut 'to die, to be ill' Hausa mutu 'to die',
Mubi ma:t 'to die'
mwt 'to die' Hebrew mwt, 'to die'
Ge'ez mo:ta 'to die'
Kabyle ammat 'to die'
to fly, to soar *pîr- *pir- (cf. Yemsa fill- 'to jump';
Dime far 'to jump')
Beja fir 'to fly' Hausa fi:ra 'to soar';
Mafa parr, perr 'bird's flight'
pꜣ 'to fly';
prj 'to soar, rise'
Ugaritic pr 'to flee';
Arabic frr 'to flee'
Ahogar fərə-t 'to fly'
name *sǔm / *sǐm- *süm- Hausa su:na: 'name';
Sura sun 'name';
Ga'anda ɬim 'name'
Akkadian šumu 'name'
to sour *s'ăm- Mocha č'àm- 'to be bitter' PEC *cam- 'to rot' *s'am 'sour' smj 'curds' Arabic sumūț 'to begin to turn sour'
to spit *tuf- *tuf- Beja tuf 'to spit';
Kemant təff y- 'to spit';
Somali tuf 'to spit'
tf 'to spit' Aramaic tpp 'to spit';
Arabic tff 'to spit'
to rend, tear *zaaʕ- Gamo zaʔ 'to rend, split' Dahalo ḏaaʕ- 'to rend, to tear (of an animal tearing its prey)'
Kw'adza daʔ- 'to bite'[m]
Ngizim dáar- 'to cut into long strips' Arabic zaʕy- 'to snatch violently from, tear out'
Abbreviations: PEC='Proto-Eastern Cushtic'.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In this display, the universally recognized primary branches of AA are in bold. Individual languages designated as primary branches are in italics.
  2. ^ Old East Africa Cushitic =South Cushitic and Yaaku.
  3. ^ Fleming excludes South Cushitic, Yaaku, and Beja from Cushitic proper.
  4. ^ Some scholars reconstruct "emphatic" consonants for Egyptian and some do not.[117]
  5. ^ As Egyptian is spelled without vowels, it is difficult to know whether it had internal change plurals. There is some evidence from Coptic, but this may be unrelated to AA. There is also some evidence from cuneiform transcriptions of Egyptian words.[158]
  6. ^ Forms that do not follow the pattern are in parentheses.
  7. ^ Some languages have an additional feminine plural form in -t that is not listed here.
  8. ^ Traditionally, the Hausa subject pronouns have been compared to the prefix conjugation. However, since the 1970s and '80s, comparisons of other Chadic subject pronouns with the Hausa ones have convinced most scholars that the similarity to the prefix conjugation is incidental.[183]
  9. ^ The Egyptian passive suffix is solely morphological and does not form a unique stem.[192]
  10. ^ The Egyptian prefix has a middle voice/intransitive/or passive meaning.[193]
  11. ^ Many of these roots have other proposed cognates that are not included on the table.
  12. ^ A caron ˇ over a vowel indicates rising tone, and a circumflex ^ over a vowel indicates falling tone. V indicates a vowel of unknown quality. ʔ indicates a glottal stop. * indicates reconstructed forms based on comparison of related languages.
  13. ^ Ehret's dictionary lists "Proto-South-Cushitic *daaʕ- 'to rend, tear', a root he reconstructs from the two words listed here in Ehret 1980.

Citations edit

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External links edit

  • Afro-Asiatic at the Linguist List MultiTree Project: Genealogical trees attributed to Delafosse 1914, Greenberg 1950–1955, Greenberg 1963, Fleming 1976, Hodge 1976, Orel & Stolbova 1995, Diakonoff 1996–1998, Ehret 1995–2000, Hayward 2000, Militarev 2005, Blench 2006, and Fleming 2006
  • , presented by Alexander Militarev at his talk "Genealogical classification of Afro-Asiatic languages according to the latest data" at the conference on the 70th anniversary of V.M. Illich-Svitych, Moscow, 2004; (in Russian)
  • Root Extension And Root Formation In Semitic And Afrasian, by Alexander Militarev in "Proceedings of the Barcelona Symposium on comparative Semitic", 19-20/11/2004. Aula Orientalis 23/1-2, 2005, pp. 83–129.
  • Akkadian-Egyptian lexical matches, by Alexander Militarev in "Papers on Semitic and Afroasiatic Linguistics in Honor of Gene B. Gragg." Ed. by Cynthia L. Miller. Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 60. Chicago: The Oriental Institute, 2007, p. 139–145.
  • A comparison of Orel-Stolbova's and Ehret's Afro-Asiatic reconstructions
  • "Is Omotic Afro-Asiatic?" by Rolf Theil (2006)
  • Afro-Asiatic webpage of Roger Blench (with family tree).

afroasiatic, languages, afro, asiatic, redirects, here, other, uses, afro, asiatic, disambiguation, afrasian, redirects, here, ethnic, classification, afro, asians, afro, asiatic, sometimes, afrasian, also, known, hamito, semitic, semito, hamitic, language, fa. Afro Asiatic redirects here For other uses see Afro Asiatic disambiguation Afrasian redirects here For the ethnic classification see Afro Asians The Afroasiatic languages or Afro Asiatic sometimes Afrasian also known as Hamito Semitic or Semito Hamitic are a language family or phylum of about 400 languages spoken predominantly in West Asia North Africa the Horn of Africa and parts of the Sahara and Sahel 2 Over 500 million people are native speakers of an Afroasiatic language constituting the fourth largest language family after Indo European Sino Tibetan and Niger Congo 3 Most linguists divide the family into six branches Berber Chadic Cushitic Egyptian Semitic and Omotic 4 The vast majority of Afroasiatic languages are considered indigenous to the African continent including all those not belonging to the Semitic branch AfroasiaticHamito Semitic Semito Hamitic AfrasianGeographicdistributionNorth Africa West Asia Horn of Africa Sahel and MaltaLinguistic classificationOne of the world s primary language familiesProto languageProto AfroasiaticSubdivisionsBerber Chadic Cushitic Egyptian Semitic Omotic 1 ISO 639 2 5afaGlottologafro1255Distribution of the Afroasiatic languages Arabic if counted as a single language is by far the most widely spoken within the family with around 300 million native speakers concentrated primarily in the Middle East and North Africa 2 Other major Afroasiatic languages include the Chadic Hausa language with over 34 million native speakers the Semitic Amharic language with 25 million and the Cushitic Somali language with 15 million Other Afroasiatic languages with millions of native speakers include the Cushitic Sidaama language the Semitic Tigrinya language and the Omotic Wolaitta language though most languages within the family are much smaller in size 5 There are many well attested Afroasiatic languages from antiquity that have since died or gone extinct including Egyptian and the Semitic languages Akkadian Biblical Hebrew Phoenician Amorite and Ugaritic There is no consensus among historical linguists as to precisely where or when the common ancestor of all Afroasiatic languages known as Proto Afroasiatic was originally spoken However most agree that the Afroasiatic homeland was located somewhere in northeastern Africa with specific proposals including the Horn of Africa Egypt the eastern Sahara A significant minority of scholars argues for an origin in the Levant The reconstructed timelines of when Proto Afroasiatic was spoken vary extensively with dates ranging from 18 000 BC to 8 000 BC Even the latest plausible dating makes Afroasiatic the oldest language family accepted by contemporary linguists 6 Comparative study of Afroasiatic is hindered by the massive disparities in textual attestation between its branches while the Semitic and Egyptian branches are attested in writing as early as the fourth millennium BC Berber Cushitic and Omotic languages were often not recorded until the 19th or 20th centuries 7 While systematic sound laws have not yet been established to explain the relationships between the various branches of Afroasiatic the languages share a number of common features One of the most important for establishing membership in the branch is a common set of pronouns 8 Other widely shared features include a prefix m which creates nouns from verbs evidence for alternations between the vowel a and a high vowel in the forms of the verb similar methods of marking gender and plurality and some details of phonology such as the presence of pharyngeal fricatives Other features found in multiple branches include a specialized verb conjugation using suffixes Egyptian Semitic Berber a specialized verb conjugation using prefixes Semitic Berber Cushitic verbal prefixes deriving middle t causative s and passive m verb forms Semitic Berber Egyptian Cushitic and a suffix used to derive adjectives Egyptian Semitic Contents 1 Name 2 Distribution and branches 2 1 Berber 2 2 Chadic 2 3 Cushitic 2 4 Egyptian 2 5 Omotic 2 6 Semitic 2 7 Other proposed branches 2 8 Further subdivisions 3 Classification history 4 Origin 4 1 Timeline 4 2 Location 5 Phonological characteristics 5 1 Syllable structure 5 2 Consonant systems 5 3 Consonant incompatibility 5 4 Vowel systems 5 5 Tones 6 Similarities in grammar syntax and morphology 6 1 General features 6 1 1 Consonantal root structures 6 1 2 Word order 6 1 3 Reduplication and gemination 6 2 Nouns 6 2 1 Grammatical gender and number 6 2 2 Noun cases and states 6 3 Modifiers and agreement 6 4 Verb forms 6 4 1 Tenses aspects and moods TAMs 6 4 2 Prefix conjugation 6 4 3 Suffix conjugation 6 5 Common derivational affixes 6 5 1 M prefix noun derivation 6 5 2 Verbal extensions 6 5 3 Nisba derivation 7 Vocabulary comparison 7 1 Pronouns 7 2 Numerals 7 3 Cognates 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 Works cited 12 External linksName editIn current scholarship the most common names for the family are Afroasiatic or Afro Asiatic Hamito Semitic and Semito Hamitic 9 10 Other proposed names that have yet to find widespread acceptance include Erythraic Erythraean Lisramic Noahitic and Lamekhite 11 12 Friedrich Muller introduced the name Hamito Semitic to describe the family in his Grundriss der Sprachwissenschaft 1876 13 The variant Semito Hamitic is mostly used in older Russian sources 9 The elements of the name were derived from the names of two sons of Noah as attested in the Book of Genesis s Table of Nations passage Semitic from the first born Shem and Hamitic from the second born Ham Genesis 5 32 14 Within the Table of Nations each of Noah s sons is presented as the common progenitor of various people groups deemed to be closely related among others Shem was the father of the Jews Assyrians and Arameans while Ham was the father of the Egyptians and Cushites This genealogy does not reflect the actual origins of these peoples languages for example the Canaanites are descendants of Ham according to the Table even though Hebrew is now classified as a Canaanite language while the Elamites are ascribed to Shem despite their language being totally unrelated to Hebrew 15 The term Semitic for the Semitic languages had already been coined in 1781 by August Ludwig von Schlozer following an earlier suggestion by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in 1710 16 Hamitic was first used by Ernest Renan in 1855 to refer to languages that appeared similar to the Semitic languages but were not themselves provably a part of the family 16 The belief in a connection between Africans and the Biblical Ham which had existed at least as far back as Isidore of Seville in the 6th century AD led scholars in the early 19th century to speak vaguely of Hamian or Hamitish languages 17 The term Hamito Semitic has largely fallen out of favor among linguists writing in English but is still frequently used in the scholarship of various other languages such as German 18 19 Several issues with the label Hamito Semitic have led many scholars to abandon the term and criticize its continued use One common objection is that the Hamitic component inaccurately suggests that a monophyletic Hamitic branch exists alongside Semitic In addition Joseph Greenberg has argued that Hamitic possesses racial connotations and that Hamito Semitic overstates the centrality of the Semitic languages within the family 20 21 22 By contrast Victor Porkhomovsky suggests that the label is simply an inherited convention and doesn t imply a duality of Semitic and Hamitic any more than Indo European implies a duality of Indic and European 12 Because of its use by several important scholars and in the titles of significant works of scholarship the total replacement of Hamito Semitic is difficult 22 While Greenberg ultimately popularized the name Afroasiatic in 1960 it appears to have been coined originally by Maurice Delafosse as French afroasiatique in 1914 20 The name refers to the fact that it is the only major language family with large populations in both Africa and Asia 12 Due to concerns that Afroasiatic could imply the inclusion of all languages spoken across Africa and Asia the name Afrasian Russian afrazijskije was proposed by Igor Diakonoff in 1980 At present it predominantly sees use among Russian scholars 21 12 The names Lisramic based on the Afroasiastic root lis tongue and the Egyptian word rmṯ person and Erythraean referring to the core area around which the languages are spoken the Red Sea have also been proposed 9 Distribution and branches edit nbsp A diagram of the six widely recognized branches of the Afroasiatic family including some of the larger or more culturally significant languages in each branch Scholars generally consider Afroasiatic to have between five and eight branches The five that are universally agreed upon are Berber also called Libyco Berber Chadic Cushitic Egyptian and Semitic 23 Most specialists consider the Omotic languages to constitute a sixth branch 4 Due to the presumed distance of relationship between the various branches many scholars prefer to refer to Afroasiatic as a linguistic phylum rather than a language family 24 M Victoria Almansa Villatoro and Silvia Stubnova Nigrelli write that there are about 400 languages in Afroasiatic 2 Ethnologue lists 375 languages 3 Many scholars estimate fewer languages exact numbers vary depending on the definitions of language and dialect 24 Berber edit Main article Berber languages The Berber or Libyco Berber languages are spoken today by perhaps 16 million people 25 They are often considered to constitute a single language with multiple dialects 26 Other scholars however argue that they are a group of around twelve languages about as different from each other as the Romance or Germanic languages 27 In the past Berber languages were spoken throughout North Africa except in Egypt 28 since the 7th century CE however they have been heavily affected by Arabic and have been replaced by it in many places 29 30 There are two extinct languages potentially related to modern Berber 31 The first is the Numidian language represented by over a thousand short inscriptions in the Libyco Berber alphabet found throughout North Africa and dating from the 2nd century BCE onward 30 The second is the Guanche language which was formerly spoken on the Canary Islands and went extinct in the 17th century CE 31 The first longer written examples of modern Berber varieties only date from the 16th or 17th centuries CE 32 Chadic edit Main article Chadic languages Chadic languages number between 150 and 190 making Chadic the largest family in Afroasiatic 33 The Chadic languages are typically divided into three major branches East Chadic Central Chadic and West Chadic 34 Most Chadic languages are located in the Chad basin with the exception of Hausa 35 Hausa is the largest Chadic language by native speakers and is spoken by a large number of people as a lingua franca in Northern Nigeria 36 It may have as many as 80 to 100 million first and second language speakers 33 Eight other Chadic languages have around 100 000 speakers other Chadic languages often have few speakers and may be endangered of going extinct 37 Only about 40 Chadic languages have been fully described by linguists 33 Cushitic edit Main article Cushitic languages There are about 30 Cushitic languages 38 more if Omotic is included 39 spoken around the Horn of Africa and in Sudan and Tanzania 38 The Cushitic family is traditionally split into four branches the single language of Beja c 3 million speakers the Agaw languages Eastern Cushitic and Southern Cushitic 40 38 Only one Cushitic language Oromo has more than 25 million speakers other languages with more than a million speakers include Somali Saho Afar Hadiyya and Sidaama 38 Many Cushitic languages have relatively few speakers 39 Cushitic does not appear to be related to the written ancient languages known from its area Meroitic or Old Nubian 41 The oldest text in a Cushitic language probably dates from around 1770 38 written orthographies were only developed for a select number of Cushitic languages in early 20th century 39 Egyptian edit nbsp Seal impression from the tomb of Seth Peribsen c 2690 BCE containing the first complete sentence in Ancient Egyptian 42 Main articles Ancient Egyptian language and Coptic language The Egyptian branch consists of a single language Ancient Egyptian which was historically spoken in the lower Nile Valley 43 Egyptian is first attested in writing around 3000 BCE and finally went extinct around 1300 CE making it the language with the longest written history in the world 30 Egyptian is usually divided into two major periods Earlier Egyptian c 3000 1300 BCE which is further subdivided into Old Egyptian and Middle Egyptian and Later Egyptian 1300 BCE 1300 CE which is further subdivided into Late Egyptian Demotic and Coptic 43 Coptic is the only stage written alphabetically to show vowels whereas Egyptian was previously written in Egyptian hieroglyphs which only represent consonants 44 In the Coptic period there is evidence for six major dialects which presumably existed previously but are obscured by pre Coptic writing additionally Middle Egyptian appears to be based on a different dialect than Old Egyptian which in turn shows dialectal similarities to Late Egyptian 45 Egyptian was replaced by Arabic as the spoken language of Egypt 46 but Coptic continues to be the liturgical language of the Coptic Orthodox Church 47 Omotic edit Main article Omotic languages The c 30 Omotic languages are still mostly undescribed by linguists 35 They are all spoken in southwest Ethiopia except for the Ganza language spoken in Sudan 48 Omotic is typically split into North Omotic or Aroid and South Omotic with the latter more influenced by the Nilotic languages it is unclear whether the Dizoid group of Omotic languages belongs to the Northern or Southern group 35 The two Omotic languages with the most speakers are Wolaitta and Gamo Gofa Dawro with about 1 2 million speakers each 39 A majority of specialists consider Omotic to constitute a sixth branch of Afroasiatic 4 Omotic was formerly considered part of the Cushitic branch 49 some scholars continue to consider it part of Cushitic 50 Other scholars have questioned whether it is Afroasiatic at all due its lack of several typical aspects of Afroasiatic morphology 4 Semitic edit Main article Semitic languages There are between 40 and 80 languages in the Semitic family 51 Today Semitic languages are spoken across North Africa West Asia and the Horn of Africa as well as on the island of Malta making them the sole Afroasiatic branch with members originating outside Africa 52 51 Arabic spoken in both Asia and Africa is by far the most widely spoken Afroasiatic language today 2 with around 300 million native speakers while the Ethiopian Amharic has around 25 million 5 Most authorities divide Semitic into two branches East Semitic which includes the extinct Akkadian language and West Semitic which includes Arabic Aramaic the Canaanite languages including Hebrew as well as the Ethiopian Semitic languages such as Ge ez and Amharic 53 The classification within West Semitic remains contested The only group with an African origin is Ethiopian Semitic 51 The oldest written attestations of Semitic languages come from Mesopotamia Northern Syria and Egypt and date as early as c 3000 BCE 52 Other proposed branches edit There there are also other proposed branches but none has so far convinced a majority of scholars 10 Linguist H Fleming proposed that the near extinct Ongota language is a separate branch of Afroasiatic 54 however this is only one of several competing theories 4 49 About half of current scholarly hypotheses on Ongota s origins align it with Afroasiatic in some way 55 Robert Hetzron proposed that Beja is not part of Cushitic but a separate branch 56 The prevailing opinion however is that Beja is a branch of Cushitic 57 The extinct Meroitic language has been proposed to represent a branch of Afroasiatic 58 Although an Afroasiatic connection is sometimes viewed as refuted it continues to be defended by scholars such as Edward Lipinski 59 The Kujarge language is usually considered part of the Chadic languages 60 however Roger Blench has proposed that it may be a separate branch of Afroasiatic 61 62 Further subdivisions edit Some proposed Afroasiatic subdivisions a Fleming 1983 Ehret 1995 Bender 1997 Diakonoff 1988 Militarev 2005 Omotic Afroasiatic Semitic Old East Africa Cushitic b Erythraic Cushitic c Beja Egyptian Berber Chadic Berber Chadic Omotic Erythraean Cushitic North Erythrean Chadic Boreafrasian Egyptian Berber Semitic Omotic Chadic Central Afroasiatic Egyptian Macro Cushtic Berber Cushitic Semitic East West Afrasian Semitic Cushitic Berber Berbero Libyan North South Afrasian Egyptian Chadic Omotic Cushomotic Cushitic Omotic North Afrasian Semitic African North Afrasian Egyptian Chado Berber Chadic Berber There is no agreement on the relationships between and subgrouping of the different Afroasiatic branches 58 Whereas Marcel Cohen 1947 claimed he saw no evidence for internal subgroupings numerous other scholars have made proposals 63 with Carsten Peust counting 27 as of 2012 64 Common trends in proposals as of 2019 include using common or lacking grammatical features to argue that Omotic was the first language to branch off often followed by Chadic 65 In contrast to scholars who argue for an early split of Chadic from Afroasiatic scholars of the Russian school tend to argue that Chadic and Egyptian are closely related 66 and scholars who rely on percentage of shared lexicon often group Chadic with Berber 67 Three scholars who agree on an early split between Omotic and the other subbranches but little else are Harold Fleming 1983 Christopher Ehret 1995 and Lionel Bender 1997 68 In contrast scholars relying on shared lexicon often produce a Cushitic Omotic group 67 Additionally the minority of scholars who favor an Asian origin of Afroasiatic tend to place Semitic as the first branch to split off 69 Disagreement on which features are innovative and which are inherited from Proto Afroasiatic produces radically different trees as can be seen by comparing the trees produced by Ehret and Igor Diakonoff 70 Responding to the above Tom Guldemann criticizes attempts at finding subgroupings based on common or lacking morphology by arguing that the presence or absence of morphological features is not a useful way of discerning subgroupings in Afroasiatic because it can not be excluded that families currently lacking certain features did not have them in the past this also means that the presence of morphological features cannot be taken as defining a subgroup 71 Peust notes that other factors that can obscure genetic relationships between languages include the poor state of present documentation and understanding of particular language families historically with Egyptian presently with Omotic 72 Gene Gragg likewise argues that more needs to be known about Omotic still and that Afroasiatic linguists have still not found convincing isoglosses on which to base genetic distinctions 65 One way of avoiding the problem of determining which features are original and which are inherited is to use a computational methodology such as lexicostatistics with one of the earliest attempts being Fleming 1983 69 This is also the method used by Alexander Militarev and Sergei Starostin to create a family tree 73 74 Fleming 2006 was a more recent attempt by Fleming with a different result from Militarev and Starostin 72 Hezekiah Bacovcin and David Wilson argue that this methodology is invalid for discerning linguistic sub relationship 70 They note the method s inability to detect various strong commonalities even between well studied branches of AA 75 Classification history editA relationship between Hebrew Arabic and Aramaic and the Berber languages was perceived as early as the 9th century CE by the Hebrew grammarian and physician Judah ibn Quraysh who is regarded as a forerunner of Afroasiatic studies 76 The French orientalist Guillaume Postel had also pointed out similarities between Hebrew Arabic and Aramaic in 1538 and Hiob Ludolf noted similarities also to Ge ez and Amharic in 1701 This family was formally described and named Semitic by August Ludwig von Schlozer in 1781 77 In 1844 Theodor Benfey first described the relationship between Semitic and the Egyptian language and connected both to the Berber and the Cushitic languages which he called Ethiopic 76 In the same year T N Newman suggested a relationship between Semitic and the Hausa language an idea that was taken up by early scholars of Afroasiatic 12 In 1855 Ernst Renan named these languages related to Semitic but not Semitic Hamitic in 1860 Carl Lottner proposed that they belonged to a single language family and in 1876 Friedrich Muller first described them as a Hamito Semitic language family 16 Muller assumed that there existed a distinct Hamitic branch of the family that consisted of Egyptian Berber and Cushitic 77 He did not include the Chadic languages though contemporary Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius argued for the relation of Hausa to the Berber languages 78 Some scholars would continue to regard Hausa as related to the other Afroasiatic languages but the idea was controversial many scholars refused to admit that the largely unwritten Negroid Chadic languages were in the same family as the Caucasian ancient civilizations of the Egyptians and Semites 79 80 nbsp Distribution of ethnic groups in Africa Afroasiatic Hamito Semitic speaking in yellow An important development in the history of Afroasiatic scholarship and the history of African linguistics was the creation of the Hamitic theory or Hamitic hypothesis by Lepsius fellow Egyptologist Christian Bunsen and linguist Christian Bleek 81 This theory connected the Hamites the originators of Hamitic languages with supposedly culturally superior Caucasians who were assumed to have migrated into Africa and intermixed with indigenous Negroid Africans in ancient times 58 The Hamitic theory would serve as the basis for Carl Meinhof s highly influential classification of African languages in his 1912 book Die Sprache der Hamiten 82 On one hand the Hamitic classification was justified partially based on linguistic features for example Meinhof split the presently understood Chadic family into Hamito Chadic and an unrelated non Hamitic Chadic based on which languages possessed grammatical gender 80 On the other hand the classification also relied on non linguistic anthropological and culturally contingent features such as skin color hair type and lifestyle 83 Ultimately Meinhof s classification of Hamitic proved to include languages from every presently recognized language family within Africa 78 The first scholar to question the existence of Hamitic languages was Marcel Cohen in 1924 19 with skepticism also expressed by A Klingenheben and Dietrich Westermann during the 1920s and 30s 58 However Meinhof s Hamitic classification remained prevalent throughout the early 20th century until it was definitively disproven by Joseph Greenberg in the 1940s based on racial and anthropological data 80 84 Instead Greenberg proposed an Afroasiatic family consisting of five branches Berber Chadic Cushitic Egyptian and Semitic 58 85 19 Reluctance among some scholars to recognize Chadic as a branch of Afroasiatic persisted as late as the 1980s 80 In 1969 Harold Fleming proposed that a group of languages classified by Greenberg as Cushitic were in fact their own independent Omotic branch a proposal that has been widely if not universally accepted 58 These six branches now constitute an academic consensus on the genetic structure of the family 86 Greenberg relied on his own method of mass comparison of vocabulary items rather than the comparative method of demonstrating regular sound correspondences to establish the family 87 An alternative classification based on the pronominal and conjugation systems was proposed by A N Tucker in 1967 88 As of 2023 widely accepted sound correspondences between the different branches have not yet been firmly established 89 90 Nevertheless morphological traits attributable to the proto language and the establishment of cognates throughout the family have confirmed its genetic validity 91 9 Origin editMain article Afroasiatic homeland Timeline edit There is no consensus as to when Proto Afroasiatic was spoken 43 The absolute latest date for when Proto Afroasiatic could have been extant is c 4000 BCE after which Egyptian and the Semitic languages are firmly attested However in all likelihood these languages began to diverge well before this hard boundary 65 The estimations offered by scholars as to when Proto Afroasiatic was spoken vary widely ranging from 18 000 BCE to 8 000 BCE 43 An estimate at the youngest end of this range still makes Afroasiatic the oldest proven language family 6 Contrasting proposals of an early emergence Tom Guldemann has argued that less time may have been required for the divergence than is usually assumed as it is possible for a language to rapidly restructure due to areal contact with the evolution of Chadic and likely also Omotic serving as pertinent examples 92 Location edit Likewise no consensus exists as to where proto Afroasiatic originated 43 Scholars have proposed locations for the Afroasiatic homeland across Africa and West Asia 93 Roger Blench writes that the debate possesses a strong ideological flavor with associations between an Asian origin and high civilization 69 An additional complicating factor is the lack of agreement on the subgroupings of Afroasiatic see Further subdivisions this makes associating archaeological evidence with the spread of Afroasiatic particularly difficult 94 Nevertheless there is a long accepted link between the speakers of Proto Southern Cushitic languages and the East African Savanna Pastoral Neolithic 5 000 years ago and archaeological evidence associates the Proto Cushitic speakers with economic transformations in the Sahara dating c 8 500 ago as well as the speakers of the Proto Zenati variety of the Berber languages with an expansion across the Maghreb in the 5th century CE 95 An origin somewhere on the African continent has broad scholarly support 65 and is seen as being well supported by the linguistic data 96 Most scholars more narrowly place the homeland near the geographic center of its present distribution 18 in the southeastern Sahara or adjacent Horn of Africa 97 The Afroasiatic languages spoken in Africa are not more closely related to each other than they are to Semitic as one would expect if only Semitic had remained in an West Asian homeland while all other branches had spread from there 98 Likewise all Semitic languages are fairly similar to each other whereas the African branches of Afroasiatic are very diverse this suggests the rapid spread of Semitic out of Africa 65 Proponents of an origin of Afroasiatic within Africa assume the proto language to have been spoken by pre Neolithic hunter gatherers 92 arguing that there is no evidence of words in Proto Afroasiatic related to agriculture or animal husbandry 97 Christopher Ehret S O Y Keita and Paul Newman also argue that archaeology does not indicate a spread of migrating farmers into Africa but rather a gradual incorporation of animal husbandry into indigenous foraging cultures 99 Ehret in a separate publication argued that the two principles in linguistic approaches for determining the origin of languages which are the principles of fewest moves and greatest diversity had put beyond reasonable doubt that the language family had originated in the Horn of Africa 100 A significant minority of scholars supports an Asian origin of Afroasiatic 69 most of whom are specialists in Semitic or Egyptian studies 101 The main proponent of an Asian origin is the linguist Alexander Militarev 102 who argues that Proto Afroasiatic was spoken by early agriculturalists in the Levant and subsequently spread to Africa 43 Militarev associates the speakers of Proto Afroasiatic with the Levantine Post Natufian Culture arguing that the reconstructed lexicon of flora and fauna as well as farming and pastoralist vocabulary indicates that Proto AA must have been spoken in this area 103 104 Scholar Jared Diamond and archaeologist Peter Bellwood have taken up Militarev s arguments as part of their general argument that the spread of linguistic macrofamilies such as Indo European Bantu and Austro Asiatic can be associated with the development of agriculture they argue that there is clear archaeological support for farming spreading from the Levant into Africa via the Nile valley 105 Phonological characteristics edit source source Speech sample in Shilha Berber branch source source Speech sample in the Semitic Neo Aramaic language a descendant of Old Aramaic source source Speech sample in Somali Cushitic branch source source Speech sample in Classical Arabic Semitic branch Afroasiatic languages share a number of phonetic and phonological features 106 Syllable structure edit Egyptian Cushitic Berber Omotic and most languages in the Semitic branch all require a syllable to begin with a consonant with the exception of some grammatical prefixes 107 Igor Diakonoff argues that this constraint goes back to Proto Afroasiatic 108 Some Chadic languages allow a syllable to begin with a vowel 107 however in many Chadic languages verbs must begin with a consonant In Cushitic and Chadic languages a glottal stop or glottal fricative may be inserted to prevent a word from beginning with a vowel 63 Typically syllables only begin with a single consonant 109 With the exception of some Chadic languages all Afroasiatic languages allow both closed and open syllables many Chadic languages do not allow a syllable to end in a consonant 110 Most words end in a vowel in Omotic and Cushitic making syllable final consonant clusters rare 109 Diakonoff argues that proto Afroasiatic syllables disallowed consonant clusters or vowels at the end of a syllable 108 Syllable weight plays an important role in AA especially in Chadic it can affect the form of affixes attached to a word 111 Consonant systems edit Several Afroasiatic languages have large consonant inventories and it is likely that this is inherited from proto Afroasiatic 112 All Afroasiatic languages contain stops and fricatives some branches have additional types of consonants such as affricates and lateral consonants 113 AA languages tend to have pharyngeal fricative consonants with Egyptian Semitic Berber and Cushitic sharing ħ and ʕ 114 In all AA languages consonants can be bilabial alveolar velar and glottal with additional places of articulation found in some branches or languages 113 Additionally the glottal stop ʔ usually exists as a phoneme and there tends to be no phonemic contrast between p and f or b and v 114 In Cushitic the Ethiopian Semitic language Tigrinya and some Chadic languages there is no underlying phoneme p at all 115 Most if not all branches of Afroasiatic distinguish between voiceless voiced and emphatic consonants 116 d The emphatic consonants are typically formed deeper in the throat than the others 114 they can be realized variously as glottalized pharyngealized uvularized ejective and or implosive consonants in the different branches 116 It is generally agreed that only the obstruents had a contrast between voiceless and voiced forms in Proto Afroasiatic whereas continuants were voiceless 118 A form of long distance consonant assimilation known as consonant harmony is attested in Berber Chadic Cushitic and Semitic it usually affects features such as pharyngealization palatalization and labialization 119 Several Omotic languages have sibilant harmony meaning that all sibilants s sh z ts etc in a word must match 120 Consonant incompatibility edit Examples of root consonant incompatibilities from Egyptian after Allen 2020a consonant cannot occur with p b f m h r ꜣ b ḫ h ḥ ẖ q k g ṯ ḏ s ḥ z t ꜥ z q g d ḏ Restrictions against the co occurrence of certain usually similar consonants in verbal roots can be found in all Afroasiatic branches though they are only weakly attested in Chadic and Omotic 121 The most widespread constraint is against two different labial consonants other than w occurring together in a root a constraint which can be found in all branches but Omotic 122 Another widespread constraint is against two non identical lateral obstruents which can be found in Egyptian Chadic Semitic and probably Cushitic 123 Such rules do not always apply for nouns numerals or denominal verbs and do not affect prefixes or suffixes added to the root 124 Roots that may have contained sequences that were possible in Proto Afroasiatic but are disallowed in the daughter languages are assumed to have undergone consonant dissimilation or assimilation 125 126 A set of constraints developed originally by Joseph Greenberg on the basis of Arabic has been claimed to be typical for Afroasiatic languages 127 Greenberg divided Semitic consonants into four types back consonants glottal pharyngeal uvular laryngeal and velar consonants front consonants dental or alveolar consonants liquid consonants and labial consonants He showed that generally any consonant from one of these groups could combine with consonants from any other group but could not be used together with consonants from the same group 124 Additionally he showed that Proto Semitic restricted a sequence of two identical consonants in the first and second position of the triliteral root 128 These rules also have a number of exceptions velar consonants can occur with pharyngeals or laryngeals 129 dental consonants can co occur with sibilants 130 However there are no Proto Semitic verbal roots with ḍ and a sibilant and roots with d and a sibilant are uncommon In all attested cases of a dental and a sibilant the sibilant occurs in first position and the dental in second 129 Similar exceptions can be demonstrated for the other AA branches that have these restrictions to their root formation 130 James P Allen has demonstrated that slightly different rules apply to Egyptian for instance Egyptian allows two identical consonants in some roots and disallows velars from occurring with pharyngeals 131 Vowel systems edit There is a large variety of vocalic systems in AA 114 and attempts to reconstruct the vocalic system of Proto Afroasiatic vary considerably 118 All branches of Afroasiatic have a limited number of underlying vowels between two and seven but the number of phonetic vowels can be much larger The quality of the underlying vowels varies considerably by language the most common vowel throughout AA is schwa 132 In the different languages central vowels are often inserted to break up consonant clusters a form of epenthesis 114 Various Semitic Cushitic Berber and Chadic languages including Arabic Amharic Berber Somali and East Dangla also exhibit various types of vowel harmony 133 Tones edit The majority of AA languages are tonal languages phonemic tonality is found in Omotic Chadic and Cushitic languages but absent in Berber and Semitic There is no information on whether Egyptian had tones 134 In contemporary Omotic Chadic and Cushitic languages tone is primarily a grammatical feature it encodes various grammatical functions only differentiating lexical roots in a few cases 135 In some Chadic and some Omotic languages every syllable has to have a tone whereas in most Cushitic languages this is not the case 136 Some scholars postulate that Proto Afroasiatic may have had tone while others believe it arose later from a pitch accent 134 Examples of tones marking lexical and morphological changes in some AA languages after Frajzyngier 2012 Language Examples Somali Cushitic dibi bull absolutive case dibi bull nominative case dibi bull genitive case inan boy inan girl Bench Omotic k ayts work do it active imperative k ayts be done passive imperative Hausa Chadic maataa woman wife maataa women wives dafaa to cook infinitive dafaa cook imperative Similarities in grammar syntax and morphology editAt present there is no generally accepted reconstruction of Proto Afroasiatic grammar syntax or morphology nor one for any of the sub branches besides Egyptian This means that it is difficult to know which features in Afroasiatic languages are retentions and which are innovations 137 Moreover all Afroasiatic languages have long been in contact with other language families and with each other leading to the possibility of widespread borrowing both within Afroasiatic and from unrelated languages 138 There are nevertheless a number of commonly observed features in Afroasiatic morphology and derivation including the use of suffixes infixes vowel lengthening and shortening as a morphological change as well as the use of tone changes to indicate morphology 139 Further commonalities and differences are explored in more detail below General features edit Consonantal root structures edit A widely attested feature in AA languages is a consonantal structure into which various vocalic templates are placed 134 This structure is particularly visible in the verbs 140 and is particularly noticeable in Semitic 134 Besides for Semitic vocalic templates are well attested for Cushitic and Berber 141 where along with Chadic it is less productive it is absent in Omotic 134 For Egyptian evidence for the root and template structure exists from Coptic 141 In Semitic Egyptian Berber verbs have no inherent vowels at all the vowels found in a given stem are dependent on the vocalic template 142 In Chadic verb stems can include an inherent vowel as well 63 Most Semitic verbs are triliteral have three consonants whereas most Chadic Omotic and Cushitic verbs are biliteral having two consonants 143 The degree to which the Proto AA verbal root was triliteral is debated 92 It may have originally been mostly biconsonantal to which various affixes such as verbal extensions were then added and lexicalized 134 Although any root could theoretically be used to create a noun or a verb there is evidence for the existence of distinct noun and verb roots which behave in different ways 144 Examples of verbal templates in AA languages after Gragg 2019 Language Akkadian Semitic Berber Beja Cushitic Ron Daffo Chadic Coptic Egyptian Root p r s to divide k n f to roast d b l to gather m w t to die k t to build Templates iprus preterite ǎknef aorist dbil past mot perfective kot infintive iparras present eknǎf perfective i dbil aorist mwaat imperfective ket qualitative iptaras perfect ekǎnnǎf imperfective i dbil modal eknef neg perfective da n bi l present sg ekennef neg imperfective e dbil present pl dabi l negative As part of these templates the alternation apophony between high vowels e g i u and a low vowel a in verbal forms is usually described as one of the main characteristics of AA languages this change codes a variety of different functions 145 It is unclear whether this system is a common AA trait 146 the Chadic examples for instance show signs of originally deriving from affixes which could explain the origins of the alterations in other languages as well 145 Word order edit It remains unclear what word order Proto Afroasiatic had 93 147 Berber Egyptian and most Semitic languages are verb initial languages whereas Cushitic Omotic and some Semitic subgroups are verb final languages 148 Proto Chadic is reconstructed as having verb initial word order 96 but most Chadic languages have subject verb object word order 147 Reduplication and gemination edit Afroasiatic Languages use the processes of reduplication and gemination which often overlap in meaning to derive nouns verbs adjectives and adverbs throughout the AA language family Gemination in particular is one of the typical features of AA 149 Full or partial reduplication of the verb is often used to derive forms showing repeated action pluractionality though it is unclear if this is an inherited feature or has been widely borrowed 150 Nouns edit Grammatical gender and number edit Use of T on feminine nouns using data from Souag 2023 Kabyle Berber Hausa Chadic Beja Cushitic Egyptian Arabic Semitic wel t daughter yarinya r the girl r lt final t ʔo r t a daughter t ʔo r the daughter zꜣ t daughter bin t daughter The assignment of nouns and pronouns to either masculine or feminine gender is present in all branches but not all languages of the Afroasiatic family 151 This sex based gender system is widely agreed to derive from Proto Afroasiatic 148 In most branches gender is an inherent property of nouns 152 Additionally even when nouns are not cognates they tend to have the same gender throughout Afroasiatic gender stability 153 In Egyptian Semitic and Berber a feminine suffix t is attested to mark feminine nouns in some Cushitic and Chadic languages a feminine t suffix or prefix lexicalized from a demonstrative is used to mark definiteness 154 In addition to these uses t also functions as a diminutive pejorative and or singulative marker in some languages 151 Some examples of internal plurals in AA using data from Gragg 2019 and Meyer amp Wolff 2019 Language Meaning Singular Plural Ge ez Semitic king nɨgus nagas t Teshelhiyt Berber country ta mazir t ti mizar Afar Cushitic body galab galo b a Hausa Chadic stream gulbi gula be Mubi Chadic eye irin aran Afroasiatic languages have a variety of ways of marking plurals in some branches nouns change gender from singular to plural gender polarity 153 while in others plural forms are ungendered 155 In addition to marking plurals via a number of affixes with the suffixes uu w and n a widely attested several AA languages make use of internal vowel change apophony and or insertion epenthesis 156 These so called internal a or broken plurals are securely attested in Semitic Berber Cushitic and Chadic although it is unclear if the Chadic examples are an independent development 157 e Another common method of forming plurals is reduplication 159 Noun cases and states edit Subject Object case marking in some AA branches using data in Gragg 2019 Huehnergard 2011 and Bender 2000 Case Oromo Cushitic Berber Akkadian Semitic Wolaitta Omotic Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine Nominative bound nam n i boy intal t i girl u frux boy t frux t girl sarr u m king sarr at u m queen keett i house macci yo woman Accusative absolutive unbound nam a intal a a frux t a frux t sarr a m sarr at a m keett a macci ya Nouns cases are found in the Semitic Berber Cushitic and Omotic branches They are not found in Chadic languages and there is no evidence for cases in Egyptian 160 A common pattern in AA languages with case is for the nominative to be marked by u or i and the accusative to be marked by a 161 However the number and types of cases varies across AA and also within the individual branches 160 Some languages in AA have a marked nominative alignment a feature which may date back to Proto Afroasiatic 162 163 Zygmont Frajzyngier states that a general characteristic of case marking in AA languages is that it tends to mark roles such as genitive dative locative etc rather than the subject and object 164 Noun states in different AA branches using data from Allen 2020 Lipinski 2001 Mous 2012 and Kossmann 2012 Language Free absolute state Construct State Additional state Aramaic Semitic malka h queen malkat Emphatic malketa Coptic Egyptian joj head jaj Pronominal jo Iraqw Cushitic afee mouths afe r Riffian Berber a ryaz man Annexed we ryaz A second category which partially overlaps with case is the AA linguistic category of state Linguists use the term state to refer to different things in different languages In Cushitic and Semitic nouns exist in the free state or the construct state The construct state is a special usually reduced form of a noun which is used when the noun is possessed by another noun Semitic or is modified by an adjective or relative clause Cushitic 165 Edward Lipinski refers to Semitic nouns as having four states absolute free indeterminate construct determinate and predicate 166 Coptic and Egyptian grammar also refers to nouns having a free absolute state a construct state and a pronominal state The construct state is used when a noun becomes unstressed as the first element of a compound whereas the pronominal state is used when the noun has a suffixed possessive pronoun 167 168 Berber instead contrasts between the free state and the annexed state the latter of which is used for a variety of purposes including for subjects placed after a verb and after certain prepositions 169 Modifiers and agreement edit There is no strict distinction between adjectives nouns and adverbs in Afroasaiatic 170 All branches of Afroasiatic have a lexical category of adjectives except for Chadic 159 some Chadic languages do have adjectives however In Berber languages adjectives are rare and are mostly replaced by nouns of quality and stative verbs 171 In different languages adjectives and other modifiers must either precede or follow the noun 172 In most AA languages numerals precede the noun 171 In those languages that have adjectives they can take gender and number markings which in some cases agree with the gender and number of the noun they are modifying 159 However in Omotic adjectives do not agree with nouns sometimes they only but take gender and number marking only when they are used as nouns in other cases they take gender and number marking only when they follow the noun the noun then receives no marking 173 Masculine Feminine Plural agreement patterns in N T N using data from Greenberg 1960 f Language meaning Masculine Feminine Plural g Old South Arabian Semitic this d n d t ʔl n Egyptian this p n t n n n Beja Cushitic this be n be t bal in Tuareg Berber relative verb form ilkem en telkem et ilkem en in Hausa Chadic possessive base na ta na A widespread pattern of gender and number marking in Afroasiatic found on demonstratives articles adjectives and relative markers is a consonant N for masculine T for feminine and N for plural This can be found in Semitic Egyptian Beja Berber and Chadic 174 154 A system K masculine T feminine and H plural can be found in Cushitic Chadic with masculine K also appearing in Omotic 118 116 The feminine marker T is one of the most consistent aspects across the different branches of AA 153 Verb forms edit Tenses aspects and moods TAMs edit There is no agreement about which tenses aspects or moods TAMs Proto Afroasiatic might have had 175 Most grammars of AA posit a distinction between perfective and imperfective verbal aspects which can be found in Cushitic Berber Semitic most Chadic languages and some Omotic languages 176 The Egyptian verbal system diverges greatly from that found in the other branches 150 Additionally it is common in Afroasiatic languages for the present imperfective form to be a derived marked form of the verb whereas in most other languages and language families the present tense is the default form of the verb 177 Another common trait across the family is the use of a suppletive imperative for verbs of motion 178 Prefix conjugation edit Conjugation of verbs using prefixes that mark person number and gender can be found in Semitic Berber and in Cushitic 150 179 where it is only found on a small set of frequent verbs 180 These prefixes are clearly cognate across the branches although their use within the verbal systems of the individual languages varies 179 There is a general pattern in which n is used for the first person plural whereas t is used for all forms of the second person regardless of plurality or gender as well as feminine singular 181 Prefixes of ʔ glottal stop for the first person singular and y for the third person masculine can also be reconstructed 182 As there is no evidence for the prefix conjugation in Omotic Chadic or Egyptian it is unclear whether this was a Proto Afroasiatic feature that has been lost in those branches or is a shared innovation among Semitic Berber and Cushitic 140 181 h The prefix conjugation in Afroasiatic following Gragg 2019 Number Person Gender Akkadian Semitic Berber Beja Cushitic Preterite Present Aorist Imperfective Old Past Old Present New Present Singular 1 a prus a parras ăknef ăʕ ekănnăf ăʕ ʔ i dbil ʔ a dbil ʔ a danbi l 2 m ta prus ta parras t ăknef et t ekănnăf et t i dbil a t i dbil a danbi l a f ta prus i ta parras i t i dbil i t i dbil i danbi l i 3 m i prus i parras y ăknef y ekănnăf ʔ i dbil ʔ i dbil danbi l f ta prus ta parras t ăknef t ekănnăf t i dbil t i dbil Plural 1 ni prus ni parras n ăknef n ekănnăf n i dbil n i dbil n e dbil 2 m ta prus a a parras t ăknef ăm t ekănnăf ăm t i dbil na t i dbil na t e dbil na f ta parras t ăknef măt t ekănnăf măt 3 m i prus u ta parras i ăknef ăn ekănnăf ăn ʔ i dbil ʔ i dbil ʔ e dbil na f i prus a i parras ăknef năt ekănnăf năt Suffix conjugation edit Some AA branches have what is called a suffix conjugation formed by adding pronominal suffixes to indicate person gender and number to a verbal adjective 150 184 In Akkadian Egyptian Berber and Cushitic this forms a stative conjugation used to express the state or result of an action the same endings as in Akkadian and Egyptian are also present in the West Semitic perfective verb form 185 186 In Akkadian and Egyptian the suffixes appear to be reduced forms of the independent pronouns see Pronouns the obvious correspondence between the endings in the two branches has been argued to show that Egyptian and Semitic are closely related 187 While some scholars posit an AA origin for this form it is possible that the Berber and Cushitic forms are independent developments 150 as they show significant differences from the Egyptian and Semitic forms The Cushitic forms in particular may be derived from morphology found in subordinate clauses 179 The suffix conjugation in Afroasiatic following Gragg 2019 Number Person Gender Akkadian Semitic Egyptian Berber Afar Cushitic Singular 1 pars a ku sḏm kw măttit ăʕ miʕ iyo h 2 m pars a ta sḏm tj măttit et miʕ ito h f pars a ti 3 m paris sḏm w măttit meʕ e h f pars at sḏm tj măttit ăt Plural 1 pars a nu sḏm wjn măttit it miʕ ino h 2 m pars a tunu sḏm tjwnj miʕ ito nu h f pars a tina 3 m pars u sḏm wj moʕ o nu h f pars a Common derivational affixes edit M prefix noun derivation edit A prefix in m is the most widely attested affix in AA that is used to derive nouns 153 188 and is one the features Joseph Greenberg used to diagnose membership in the family It forms agent nouns place nouns and instrument nouns 118 56 In some branches it can also derive abstract nouns and participles 188 Omotic meanwhile shows evidence for a non productive prefix mV associated with the feminine gender 189 Christopher Ehret has argued that this prefix is a later development that was not present in Proto Afro Asiatic but rather derived from a PAA indefinite pronoun m 190 Such an etymology is rejected by A Zaborski and Gabor Takacs the latter of whom argues for a PAA ma that unites all or some of the meanings in the modern languages 191 Examples of m prefix noun derivations using data from Meyer amp Wolff 2019 Beylage 2018 and Wilson 2020 Language Root Agent Instrument Place Abstract Egyptian swr to drink m swr drinking bowl Arabic Semitic k t b to write mu katib un writer ma ktab un school Hausa Chadic hayf to give birth ma haif ii father ma haif aa birthplace Beja Cushitic firi to give birth mi frey birth Tuareg Berber aks to eat em aks eater Verbal extensions edit Common verbal extensions in Afroasiatic using data from Wilson 2020 Bubenik 2023 and Kossmann 2007 Language Causative s Reflexive middle t Passive n Akkadian Semitic u s apris make cut mi t gurum agree with one another i p paris gt i n paris be cut Figuig Berber ssu feɣ let out i tte ska it has been built mmu bḍa divide oneself Beja Cushitic s dabil make gather t dabil be gathered m dabaal gather each other Egyptian s ꜥnḫ make live pr tj is sent forth i n hp escape j Many AA languages use prefixes or suffixes verbal extensions to encode various pieces of information about the verb 194 Three derivational prefixes can be reconstructed for Proto Afroasiatic s causative t middle voice or reflexive and n passive 184 the prefixes appear with various related meanings in the individual daughter languages and branches 195 Christopher Ehret has proposed that Proto Afroasiatic originally had as many as thirty seven separate verbal extensions many of which then became fossilized as third consonants 196 This theory has been criticized by some such as Andrzej Zaborski and Alan Kaye as being too many extensions to be realistic though Zygmont Frajzyngier and Erin Shay note that some Chadic languages have as many as twelve extensions 93 Nisba derivation edit The so called Nisba is a suffix used to derive adjectives from nouns and in Egyptian also from prepositions 197 It is found in Egyptian Semitic and possibly in some relic forms Berber 198 The suffix has the same basic form in Egyptian and Semitic 197 taking the form i y in Semitic and being written j in Egyptian The Semitic and Cushitic genitive case in i ii may be related to nisba adjective derivation 199 158 Nisba derivation in Semitic and Egyptian using data from Wilson 2020 and Beylage 2018 Language Noun preposition Derived adjective Hebrew Semitic yareaḥ moon yereḥi lunar Egyptian nṯr god nṯr j divine ḥr upon ḥr j upper which is upon Due to its presence in the oldest attested and best known AA branches nisba derivation is often thought of as a quintessentially Afroasiatic feature 158 200 Christopher Ehret argues for its presence in Proto Afroasiatic and for its attestation in some form in all branches with a shape ay in addition to iy in some cases 201 Vocabulary comparison editPronouns edit The forms of the pronouns are very stable throughout Afroasiatic excluding Omotic 147 and they have been used as one of the chief tools for determining whether a language belongs to the family 8 However there is no consensus on what the reconstructed set of Afroasiatic pronouns might have looked like 34 A common characteristic of AA languages is the existence of a special set of independent pronouns which are distinct from subject pronouns They can occur together with subject pronouns but cannot fulfill an object function 202 Also common are dependent affix pronouns used for direct objects and to mark possession 34 For most branches the first person pronouns contain a nasal consonant n m whereas the third person displays a sibilant consonant s sh 203 Other commonalities are masculine and feminine forms used in both the second and third persons except in Cushitic and Omotic 147 These pronouns tend to show a masculine u and a feminine i 116 The Omotic forms of the personal pronouns differ from the others with only the plural forms in North Omotic appearing potentially to be cognate 204 Pronouns in the Afroasiatic family following Gragg 2019 Meaning North Omotic Yemsa Beja Cushitic Baniamer East Cushitic Somali West Chadic Hausa East Chadic Mubi Egyptian East Semitic Akkadian West Semitic Arabic Berber Tashelhiyt I ind ta ani ani ga ni nde jnk ana ku ʔana nkki me my dep na ta u ʔe na ni j wj i ya i ni i we ind inno hinin anna ga inna ga mu ana ene jnn ni nu naħnu nkkwni you masc sing ind ne baru k adi ga kai kam nt k at ta ʔan ta kiji you fem sing ind batu k ke kin nt ṯ at ti ʔan ti kmmi f you masc sing dep ne u k a ku ka ka k ka ka k you fem sing dep u k i ku ki ki ṯ ki ki m you plural dep niti u kna idin ku ka n ṯn kunu m kina f kum m kunna f un m un t f he ind bar baru s isa ga si ar nt f su ntta m she ind batu s ija ga ita tir nt s si hiya ntta t he dep ba us si a f sw su hu s she dep ta di s sy sa ha Numerals edit Unlike in the Indo European or Austronesian language families numerals in AA languages cannot be traced to a proto system 205 206 The Cushitic and Chadic numeral systems appear to have originally been base 5 The system in Berber Egyptian and Semitic however has independent words for the numbers 6 9 207 Thus it is possible that the numerals in Egyptian Berber and Semitic are more closely related whereas the Cushitic and Chadic numerals are more closely related to each other 208 209 Modern Chadic numeral systems are sometimes decimal having separate names for the numbers 1 10 and sometimes base 5 deriving the numbers 6 9 from the numbers 1 5 in some way 210 Some families show more than one word for a numeral Chadic Semitic and Berber each have two words for two 211 212 and Semitic has four words for one 213 Andrzej Zaborski further notes that the numbers one two and five are particularly susceptible to replacement by new words with five often based on a word meaning hand 205 Another factor making comparisons of AA numeral systems difficult is the possibility of borrowing 206 Only some Berber languages maintain the native Berber numeral system with many using Arabic loans for higher numbers and some from any numeral beyond two 214 In some Berber languages the roots for one and two are also borrowed from Arabic 215 Some South Cushitic numerals are borrowed from Nilotic languages other Cushitic numerals have been borrowed from Ethiopian Semitic languages 216 Numerals from throughout Afroasiatic using data from Blazek 2017 Blazek 2018 Lipinski 2001 and Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012a Meaning Egyptian Tuareg Berber Akkadian East Semitic Arabic West Semitic Beja North Cushitic West Central Oromo Cushitic Lele East Chadic Gidar Central Chadic Bench North Omotic One m wꜥ yiwen yan ig isten waḥid gaal tokko pina taka mat f wꜥ t yiwet ist istiat waḥida gaat Two m sn wj sin sen sina ʔiṯnani maloob lama so sula nam f sn tj snat sent sitta ʔiṯnatani maloot Three m ḫmt w ḵraḍ saṛḍ salasat ṯalaṯa mhay sadii subu hoku kaz f ḫmt t ḵraṭt saṛṭ salas ṯalaṯ mhayt Four m j fd w kkuẓ erbet t ʔarbaʕa faḍig afur porin poɗo od f j fd t kkuẓt erba ʔarbaʕ faḍigt Five m dj w semmus afus ḫamsat ḫamsa ay sani bay ɬe ut ʃ f dj t semmust ḫamis ḫams ayt Six m sjs w sḍis sisset sitta asagwir jaha meneŋ ɬre sapm f sjs t sḍist sis s sitt asagwitt Seven m sfḫ w sa sebet t sabʕa asaramaab tolba mataliŋ buhul napm f sfḫ t sat seba sabʕ asaramaat Eight m ḫmn w tam samanat ṯamaniya asumhay saddet jurgu dodoporo nyartn f ḫmn t tamt samane ṯamanin asumhayt Nine m psḏ w tẓa tisit tisʕa assaḍig sagal cela vaytak irstn f psḏ t tẓat tise tisʕ assaḍigt Ten m mḏ w mraw eseret ʕasara tamin kuḍan goro klau tam f mḏ t mrawt eser ʕasr tamint Cognates edit Afroasiatic languages share a vocabulary of Proto Afroasiatic origin to varying extents 217 Writing in 2004 John Huehnergard notes the great difficulty in establishing cognate sets across the family 184 Identifying cognates is difficult because the languages in question are often separated by thousands of years of development and many languages within the family have long been in contact with each other raising the possibility of loanwords 7 Work is also hampered because of the poor state of documentation of many languages 218 There are two etymological dictionaries of Afroasiatic one by Christopher Ehret and one by Vladimir Orel and Olga Stolbova both from 1995 Both works provide highly divergent reconstructions and have been heavily criticized by other scholars 219 Andrzej Zaborski refers to Orel and Stolbova s reconstructions as controversial and Ehret s as not acceptable to many scholars 10 Tom Guldemann argues that much comparative work in Afroasiatic suffers from not attempting first to reconstruct smaller units within the individual branches but instead comparing words in the individual languages 220 Nevertheless both dictionaries agree on some items and some proposed cognates are uncontroversial 7 184 Such cognates tend to rely on relatively simple sound correspondences 112 Some widely recognized cognates in Afroasiatic following Hayward 2000 Gragg 2019 and Huehnergard 2004 k Meaning Proto Afroasiatic Omotic Cushitic Chadic Egyptian Semitic Berber Ehret 1995 l Orel amp Stolbova 1995 to strike to squeeze bak Gamo bak strike Afar bak Wandala bak to strike beat bk kill with a sword Arabic bkk to squeeze tear Tuareg bakkat to strike pound blood dim dam dam Kaffa damo blood Aari zomʔi to blood cf Oromo di ma red Bolewa dom cf jdmj red linen Akkadian damu blood Ghadames demmm en blood food kamaʔ kamay Afar okm to eat Hausa ka ma ma snack Tumak ka m mush kmj food to be old elder gad gud gad Oromo gada age group generation Burji gad uwa old man Ngizim gad e old Arabic gadd grandfather ancestor to say geh gay Sheko ge to say Aari gai to say Hausa gaya to say ḏwj to call say cf Hebrew gʕy to shout tongue lis to lick les tongue Kaffa mi laso tongue Mwaghavul liis tongue Gisiga eles tongue ns tongue Akkadian lisa nu tongue Kabyle iles tongue to die maaw mawut Rendille amut to die to be ill Hausa mutu to die Mubi ma t to die mwt to die Hebrew mwt to die Ge ez mo ta to die Kabyle ammat to die to fly to soar pir pir cf Yemsa fill to jump Dime far to jump Beja fir to fly Hausa fi ra to soar Mafa parr perr bird s flight pꜣ to fly prj to soar rise Ugaritic pr to flee Arabic frr to flee Ahogar fere t to fly name sǔm sǐm sum Hausa su na name Sura sun name Ga anda ɬim name Akkadian sumu name to sour s ăm Mocha c am to be bitter PEC cam to rot s am sour smj curds Arabic sumuț to begin to turn sour to spit tuf tuf Beja tuf to spit Kemant teff y to spit Somali tuf to spit tf to spit Aramaic tpp to spit Arabic tff to spit to rend tear zaaʕ Gamo zaʔ to rend split Dahalo ḏaaʕ to rend to tear of an animal tearing its prey Kw adza daʔ to bite m Ngizim daar to cut into long strips Arabic zaʕy to snatch violently from tear out Abbreviations PEC Proto Eastern Cushtic See also editAfroasiatic phonetic notation Languages of Africa Languages of Asia Nostratic languages Borean languagesNotes edit In this display the universally recognized primary branches of AA are in bold Individual languages designated as primary branches are in italics Old East Africa Cushitic South Cushitic and Yaaku Fleming excludes South Cushitic Yaaku and Beja from Cushitic proper Some scholars reconstruct emphatic consonants for Egyptian and some do not 117 As Egyptian is spelled without vowels it is difficult to know whether it had internal change plurals There is some evidence from Coptic but this may be unrelated to AA There is also some evidence from cuneiform transcriptions of Egyptian words 158 Forms that do not follow the pattern are in parentheses Some languages have an additional feminine plural form in t that is not listed here Traditionally the Hausa subject pronouns have been compared to the prefix conjugation However since the 1970s and 80s comparisons of other Chadic subject pronouns with the Hausa ones have convinced most scholars that the similarity to the prefix conjugation is incidental 183 The Egyptian passive suffix is solely morphological and does not form a unique stem 192 The Egyptian prefix has a middle voice intransitive or passive meaning 193 Many of these roots have other proposed cognates that are not included on the table A caron ˇ over a vowel indicates rising tone and a circumflex over a vowel indicates falling tone V indicates a vowel of unknown quality ʔ indicates a glottal stop indicates reconstructed forms based on comparison of related languages Ehret s dictionary lists Proto South Cushitic daaʕ to rend tear a root he reconstructs from the two words listed here in Ehret 1980 Citations edit Sands 2009 pp 559 580 a b c d Almansa Villatoro amp Stubnova Nigrelli 2023 p 3 a b Eberhard Simons amp Fennig 2021 Summary by language family a b c d e Sands 2009 p 565 a b Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 249 a b Nichols 2003 p 300 a b c Gragg 2019 p 41 a b Guldemann 2018 p 315 316 a b c d Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 3 a b c Zaborski 2011 Hetzron 2009 p 454 a b c d e Porkhomovsky 2020 p 270 Lipinski 2001 pp 21 22 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 250 Porkhomovsky 2020 pp 269 270 a b c Porkhomovsky 2020 p 269 Solleveld 2020 p 204 a b Huehnergard 2004 p 138 a b c Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 5 a b Dimmendaal 2008 p 840 a b Hetzron 2009 p 545 a b Almansa Villatoro amp Stubnova Nigrelli 2023 p 4 Huehnergard 2004 p 138 139 a b Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 1 Gragg 2019 pp 23 24 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 252 253 Guldemann 2018 p 324 Lipinski 2001 p 34 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 253 a b c Gragg 2019 p 24 a b Guldemann 2018 p 325 Lipinski 2001 p 37 a b c Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 254 a b c Gragg 2019 p 29 a b c Gragg 2019 p 27 Lipinski 2001 p 39 Guldemann 2018 pp 342 343 a b c d e Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 259 a b c d Appleyard 2012 p 39 Gragg 2019 pp 25 26 Lipinski 2001 p 30 Allen 2013 p 2 a b c d e f Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 252 Allen 2013 pp 4 5 Allen 2013 p 4 Guldemann 2018 p 322 Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 6 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 261 a b Huehnergard 2004 p 139 Gragg 2019 p 26 a b c Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 262 a b Lipinski 2001 p 24 Hayward 2000 pp 78 80 Fleming 2006 Guldemann 2018 p 342 a b Huehnergard 2004 p 140 Guldemann 2018 p 327 a b c d e f Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 251 Guldemann 2018 p 282 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 258 Peust 2012 p 231 Blench 2008 a b c Frajzyngier 2018 Peust 2012 p 225 227 a b c d e Gragg 2019 p 43 Blench 2006 p 145 a b Sanker 2023 p 29 Guldemann 2018 pp 312 313 a b c d Blench 2006 p 144 a b Bacovcin amp Wilson 2018 p 422 Guldemann 2018 p 310 a b Peust 2012 p 227 Militarev 2005 pp 398 399 Blazek 2013 p 1 Bacovcin amp Wilson 2018 p 427 a b Lipinski 2001 p 21 a b Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 4 a b Hayward 2000 p 84 Ruhlen 1991 pp 87 88 a b c d Porkhomovsky 2020 p 271 Solleveld 2020 p 204 205 Guldemann 2018 p 61 Ruhlen 1991 pp 82 83 Guldemann 2018 p 309 Gragg 2019 p 22 Porkhomovsky 2020 p 272 Hayward 2000 pp 86 87 Hodge 1971 p 11 Winand 2023 p 40 Huehnergard 2023 p 140 Guldemann 2018 p 347 a b c Guldemann 2018 p 311 a b c Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 13 Blench 2006 pp 148 150 Ehret et al 2023 p 270 a b Frajzyngier 2012 p 13 a b Ehret Keita amp Newman 2004 p 1680 Starostin 2017 p 226 Ehret Keita amp Newman 2004 pp 1680 1681 Ehret Christopher 20 June 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton University Press p 88 ISBN 978 0 691 24410 5 Blench 2006 p 150 Almansa Villatoro amp Stubnova Nigrelli 2023 p 5 Militarev 2002 Militarev 2009 Diamond amp Bellwood 2003 p 601 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 263 a b Frajzyngier 2012 p 511 a b Diakonoff 1988 p 42 a b Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 304 Frajzyngier 2012 p 511 512 Frajzyngier 2012 p 512 a b Hayward 2000 p 94 a b Frajzyngier 2012 p 508 a b c d e Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 264 Frajzyngier 2012 p 509 a b c d Hetzron 2009 p 548 Huehnergard 2023 p 142 a b c d Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012 p 10 Frajzyngier 2012 p 517 Amha 2012 pp 439 440 Bender 1978 p 9 10 Ehret 1995 p 77 488 Ehret 1995 p 395 a b Greenberg 1950a p 178 Edzard 1992 p 153 154 Takacs 1999 pp 323 332 Vernet 2011 p 1 Greenberg 1950a pp 167 168 a b Vernet 2011 p 7 a b Bender 1978 p 10 Allen 2020a p 90 92 Frajzyngier 2012 p 621 Frajzyngier 2012 pp 517 519 a b c d e f Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 265 Frajzyngier 2012 p 12 Frajzyngier 2012 p 513 Frajzyngier amp Shay 2020 p 572 573 Shay 2014 p 574 Frajzyngier 2012 pp 529 530 a b Gragg 2019 p 36 a b Gragg 2019 p 37 Frajzyngier 2012 p 622 Hayward 2000 p 93 Shay 2014 p 576 a b Frajzyngier 2012 p 593 Gragg 2019 p 38 a b c d Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 269 a b Guldemann 2018 p 319 Frajzyngier 2012 p 531 a b c d e Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 268 a b Frajzyngier 2012 p 522 Frajzyngier 2012 p 523 a b c d Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 266 a b Souag 2023 p 308 Frajzyngier 2012 p 253 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 pp 266 267 Gragg 2019 pp 40 41 a b c Peust 2012 p 243 a b c Frajzyngier 2012 p 538 a b Frajzyngier 2012 p 534 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 319 Frajzyngier 2012 pp 535 536 Guldemann 2018 p 317 Frajzyngier 2012 p 535 Frajzyngier 2012 p 533 Lipinski 2001 p 265 Allen 2020 p 13 Beylage 2018 p 59 Frajzyngier 2012 pp 533 534 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 312 a b Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 279 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 298 Frajzyngier 2012 pp 539 540 Guldemann 2018 p 316 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 267 Frajzyngier 2012 p 592 Kouwenberg 2010 p 90 Frajzyngier amp Shay 2020 a b c Gragg 2019 p 34 Mous 2012 p 391 a b Guldemann 2018 p 315 Huehnergard 2004 p 140 141 Peust 2012 pp 238 239 a b c d Huehnergard 2004 p 141 Gragg 2019 p 33 Lipinski 2001 p 360 Gragg 2019 p 33 24 a b Wilson 2020 p 123 Shay 2014 p 577 Ehret 1995 p 52 Takacs 2008 p 8 Stauder 2023 pp 88 90 Allen 2013 p 94 Frajzyngier 2012 p 525 Stauder 2023 p 87 Ehret 1995 pp 27 34 a b Beylage 2018 p 115 Wilson 2020 p 47 Huehnergard 2004 p 148 Wilson 2020 p 168 Ehret 1995 p 16 Frajzyngier 2012 pp 523 524 Guldemann 2018 p 314 315 Gragg 2019 p 32 a b Zaborski 1987 p 317 a b Kaye amp Daniels 1992 p 439 Zaborski 1987 pp 317 318 Lipinski 2001 p 280 Kaye amp Daniels 1992 pp 440 441 Frajzyngier amp Shay 2012a p 273 Kaye amp Daniels 1992 p 440 Lipinski 2001 p 284 Lipinski 2001 p 281 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 295 Lipinski 2001 p 280 281 Zaborski 1987 p 325 Meyer amp Wolff 2019 p 248 Porkhomovsky 2020 p 273 Guldemann 2018 p 317 318 Guldemann 2018 p 318 Works cited editAllen James P 2013 The Ancient Egyptian Language A Historical Study Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139506090 ISBN 9781139506090 Allen James P 2020 Coptic A Grammar of its Six Major Dialects Eisenbrauns doi 10 1515 9781646020867 ISBN 9781646020867 Allen James P 2020a Ancient Egyptian Phonology Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108751827 ISBN 9781108751827 S2CID 216256704 Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia 2023 Comparative Afroasiatic Linguistics and the Place of Ancient Egyptian Within the Phylum In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns pp 3 18 ISBN 9781646022120 Amha Azeb 2012 Omotic In Frajzyngier Zygmunt Shay Erin eds The Afroasiatic Languages Cambridge University Press pp 423 504 ISBN 978 0 521 86533 3 Appleyard David 2012 Semitic Cushitic Omotic Relations In Weninger Stefan ed The Semitic Languages An International Handbook de Gruyter Mouton pp 38 53 ISBN 978 3 11 018613 0 Bacovcin Hezekiah Akiva Wilson David 2018 A New Method for Computational Cladistics An Afro Asiatic Case Study Transactions of the Philological Society 116 3 410 434 doi 10 1111 1467 968X 12128 Bender M Lionel 1978 Consonant Co Occurrence Restrictions in Afroasiatic Verb Roots In Fronzaroli Pelio ed Atti del secondo Congresso internazionale di linguistica camito semitica Firenze 16 19 aprile 1974 Istituto di linguistica e di lingue orientale Universita di Firenze pp 9 19 Bender M Lionel 1997 Upside Down Afrasian Afrikanistische Arbeitspapiere 50 Kolner Institut fur Afrikanistik 19 34 Bender M Lionel 2000 Comparative Morphology of the Omotic Languages Lincoln Europea Beylage Peter 2018 Middle Egyptian Eisenbrauns doi 10 1515 9781646022021 ISBN 9781646022021 Blazek Vaclav 2013 Levant and North Africa Afroasiatic linguistic history In Ness Immanuel ed The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration Blackwell pp 1 8 doi 10 1002 9781444351071 wbeghm815 ISBN 9781444334890 Blazek Vaclav 2017 Omotic Numerals Folia Orientalia 54 63 86 Blazek Vaclav 2018 Cushitic Numerals Folia Orientalia 55 33 60 doi 10 24425 for 2018 124678 Blench Roger 2006 Archaeology Language and the African Past Oxford UK Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 7591 0466 2 Blench Roger 2008 Links between Cushitic Omotic Chadic and the position of Kujarge PDF 5th International Conference of Cushitic and Omotic languages Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Bubenik Vit 2023 Reconstructing the Proto Semitic Nominal and Verbal Systems in the Context of Afroasiatic Languages In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns 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159 Huehnergard John 2011 A Grammar of Akkadian 3 ed Eisenbrauns Huehnergard John 2023 Proto Semitic and Egyptian In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns pp 139 160 ISBN 9781646022120 Kaye Alan S Daniels Peter T 1992 Comparative Afroasiatic and General Genetic Linguistics WORD 43 3 429 458 doi 10 1080 00437956 1992 12098319 Kossmann Maarten 2007 Berber Morphology In Kaye Alan S ed Morphologies of Asia and Africa Eisenbrauns pp 429 446 doi 10 1515 9781575065663 022 ISBN 978 1 57506 566 3 Kossmann Maarten 2012 Berber In Frajzyngier Zygmunt Shay Erin eds The Afroasiatic Languages Cambridge University Press pp 18 101 ISBN 978 0 521 86533 3 Kouwenberg N J C 2010 The Akkadian Verb and Its Semitic Background Eisenbrauns doi 10 1515 9781575066240 ISBN 9781575066240 Lipinski Edward 2001 Semitic Languages Outline of a Comparative Grammar Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 429 0815 4 Meyer Ronny Wolff H Ekkehard 2019 Afroasiatic Linguistic Features and Typologies In Wolff H Ekkehard ed The Cambridge Handbook of African Linguistics Cambridge University Press pp 246 325 Mous Maarten 2012 Cushitic languages In Frajzyngier Zygmunt Shay Erin eds The Afroasiatic Languages Cambridge University Press pp 342 422 ISBN 978 0 521 86533 3 Orel Vladimir E Stolbova Olga V 1995 Hamito Semitic Etymological Dictionary Materials for a Reconstruction Leiden Brill ISBN 90 04 10051 2 Militarev Alexander 2002 The Prehistory of a Dispersal The Proto Afrasian Afroasiatic Farming Lexicon PDF In Bellwood Peter S Renfrew Colin eds Examining the Farming Language Dispersal Hypothesis McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research Militarev Alexander 2005 Once more about glottochronology and the comparative method the Omotic Afrasian case PDF Orientalia et Classica VI Aspekty Komparatistiki 6 339 408 Militarev Alexander 2009 Proto Afrasian Lexicon Confirming West Asian Homeland Pastoralism Journal of Language Relationship 1 95 106 Nichols Johanna 2003 Diversity and Stability in Language In Joseph Brian D Janda Richard D eds The Handbook of Historical Linguistics Blackwell pp 283 310 ISBN 0 631 19571 8 Peust Carsten 2012 On the Subgrouping of Afro Asiatic or How to use an unrooted phylogenetic tree in historical linguistics Lingua Aegyptia 20 221 251 Porkhomovsky Victor 2020 Afro Asiatic Overview In Vossen Rainer Dimmendaal Gerrit J eds The Oxford Handbook of African Languages Oxford University Press pp 269 274 Ruhlen Merritt 1991 A Guide to the World s Languages Classification Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804718943 Sands Bonny 2009 Africa s Linguistic Diversity Language and Linguistics Compass 3 2 559 580 doi 10 1111 j 1749 818x 2008 00124 x Sanker Chelsea 2023 Data Limitations and Supplementary Methods in Placing Egyptian In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns pp 19 34 ISBN 9781646022120 Shay Erin 2014 Afroasiatic In Lieber Rochelle Stekauer Pavol eds The Oxford Handbook of Derivational Morphology Oxford University Press pp 573 590 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199641642 013 0032 ISBN 978 0 19 964164 2 Solleveld Floris 2020 Lepsius as a linguist fieldwork philology phonetics and the Hamitic hypothesis Language and History 63 3 193 213 doi 10 1080 17597536 2020 1760066 S2CID 219971042 Souag Lameen 2023 Restructured or Archaic The Hunt for Shared Morphological Innovation Involving Egyptian In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns pp 303 318 ISBN 9781646022120 Stauder Andreas 2023 Egyptian Morphology in Afroasiatic Perspective In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns pp 53 136 ISBN 9781646022120 Starostin George 2017 Macrofamilies and Agricultural Lexicon Problems and Perspectives In Robbeets Martine Savelyev Alexander eds Language Dispersal Beyond Farming John Benjamins pp 215 233 doi 10 1075 z 215 09sta Takacs Gabor 1999 Etymological Dictionary of Egyptian Volume 1 A Phonological Introduction Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11538 5 Takacs Gabor 2008 Etymological Dictionary of Egyptian Volume 3 m Brill ISBN 978 90 47 42379 9 Vernet Eulalia 2011 Semitic Root Incompatibilities and Historical Linguistics Journal of Semitic Studies 56 1 1 18 doi 10 1093 jss fgq056 hdl 2445 195869 Wilson David 2020 A Concatenative Analysis of Diachronic Afro Asiatic Morphology Thesis University of Pennsylvania Winand Jean 2023 Afroasiatic Lexical Comparison An Egyptologist s Point of View In Almansa Villatoro M Victoria Stubnova Nigrelli Silvia eds Ancient Egyptian and Afroasiatic Rethinking the Origins Eisenbrauns pp 35 50 ISBN 9781646022120 Zaborski Andrzej 1987 Basic Numerals in Cushitic In Jungraithmayr Herrmann Mueller Walter W eds Proceedings of the Fourth International Hamito Semitic Congress John Benjamins pp 317 347 Zaborski Andrzej 2011 Afro Asiatic Languages In Edzard Lutz Jong Rudolf de eds Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics Managing Editors Online ed Brill doi 10 1163 1570 6699 eall EALL COM 0008 External links editAfro Asiatic at the Linguist List MultiTree Project Genealogical trees attributed to Delafosse 1914 Greenberg 1950 1955 Greenberg 1963 Fleming 1976 Hodge 1976 Orel amp Stolbova 1995 Diakonoff 1996 1998 Ehret 1995 2000 Hayward 2000 Militarev 2005 Blench 2006 and Fleming 2006 Afro Asiatic and Semitic genealogical trees presented by Alexander Militarev at his talk Genealogical classification of Afro Asiatic languages according to the latest data at the conference on the 70th anniversary of V M Illich Svitych Moscow 2004 short annotations of the talks given there in Russian Root Extension And Root Formation In Semitic And Afrasian by Alexander Militarev in Proceedings of the Barcelona Symposium on comparative Semitic 19 20 11 2004 Aula Orientalis 23 1 2 2005 pp 83 129 Akkadian Egyptian lexical matches by Alexander Militarev in Papers on Semitic and Afroasiatic Linguistics in Honor of Gene B Gragg Ed by Cynthia L Miller Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 60 Chicago The Oriental Institute 2007 p 139 145 A comparison of Orel Stolbova s and Ehret s Afro Asiatic reconstructions Is Omotic Afro Asiatic by Rolf Theil 2006 Afro Asiatic webpage of Roger Blench with family tree Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Afroasiatic languages amp oldid 1219429471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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