fbpx
Wikipedia

Northwest Semitic languages

Northwest Semitic is a division of the Semitic languages comprising the indigenous languages of the Levant. It emerged from Proto-Semitic in the Early Bronze Age. It is first attested in proper names identified as Amorite in the Middle Bronze Age. The oldest coherent texts are in Ugaritic, dating to the Late Bronze Age, which by the time of the Bronze Age collapse are joined by Old Aramaic, and by the Iron Age by Sutean and the Canaanite languages (Phoenician/Punic, Edomite, Moabite and Hebrew).[1]

Northwest Semitic
Levantine
Geographic
distribution
Concentrated in the Middle East
Linguistic classificationAfro-Asiatic
Subdivisions
Glottolognort3165

The term was coined by Carl Brockelmann in 1908,[2] who separated Fritz Hommel's 1883 classification of Semitic languages[2] into Northwest (Canaanite and Aramaic), East Semitic (Akkadian, its Assyrian and Babylonian dialects, Eblaite) and Southwest (Arabic, Old South Arabian languages and Abyssinian).[3]

Brockelmann's Canaanite sub-group includes Ugaritic, Phoenician and Hebrew. Some scholars now regard Ugaritic either as belonging to a separate branch of Northwest Semitic (alongside Canaanite) or a dialect of Amorite.

Central Semitic is a proposed intermediate group comprising Northwest Semitic and Arabic. Central Semitic is either a subgroup of West Semitic or a top-level division of Semitic alongside East Semitic and South Semitic.[4] SIL Ethnologue in its system of classification (of living languages only) eliminates Northwest Semitic entirely by joining Canaanite and Arabic in a "South-Central" group which together with Aramaic forms Central Semitic.[5] The Deir Alla Inscription and Samalian have been identified as language varieties falling outside Aramaic proper but with some similarities to it, possibly in an "Aramoid" or "Syrian" subgroup.[6][7]

It is clear that the Taymanitic script expressed a distinct linguistic variety that is not Arabic and not closely related to Hismaic or Safaitic, while it can tentatively be suggested that it was more closely related to Northwest Semitic.[8]

Historical development edit

 
Aramaic alphabets
 
Phoenician alphabets
Comparison of Northwest Semitic scripts, by Mark Lidzbarski in 1898
 
Charles Morton's 1759 updated version of Edward Bernard's "Orbis eruditi",[9] comparing all known alphabets as of 1689, including Northwest Semitic which is described as "Adami, Noachi, Nini, Abrahami, Phoenicum et Samaritarum ante Christe (5509) a nummis Iudaicis Africanisque Pentateucho Mosis"

The time period for the split of Northwest Semitic from Proto-Semitic or from other Semitic groups is uncertain, it has been recently suggested by Richard C. Steiner that the earliest attestation of Northwest Semitic is to be found in snake spells from the Egyptian Pyramid Texts, dating to the mid-third millennium BCE.[10] Amorite personal names and words in Akkadian and Egyptian texts from the late third millennium to the mid-second millennium BCE and the language of the Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions dated to the first half of the second millennium otherwise constitute the earliest traces of Northwest Semitic, the first Northwest Semitic language attested in full being Ugaritic in the 14th century BCE.[11]

During the early 1st millennium, the Phoenician language was spread throughout the Mediterranean by Phoenician colonists, most notably to Carthage in today's Tunisia. The Phoenician alphabet is of fundamental importance in human history as the source and ancestor of the Greek alphabet, the later Latin alphabet, the Aramaic (Square Hebrew), Syriac, and Arabic writing systems, Germanic runes, and ultimately Cyrillic.

From the 8th century BCE, the use of Imperial Aramaic by the Neo-Assyrian Empire (935–608 BC) and the succeeding Neo-Babylonian Empire (612–539 BC) and Achaemenid Empire (539–332 BC), a form of the Aramaic language, spread throughout the Northwest Semitic region of the Levant, northern regions of the Arabian peninsula and southern regions of Anatolia, and gradually drove most of the other Northwest Semitic languages to extinction. The ancient Judaeans adopted Aramaic for daily use, and parts of the Tanakh are written in it. Hebrew was preserved, however, as a Jewish liturgical language and language of scholarship, and resurrected in the 19th century, with modern adaptations, to become the Modern Hebrew language of the State of Israel.

After the Muslim conquests of the 7th century, Arabic began to gradually replace Aramaic throughout the region. Classical Syriac-Aramaic survives today as the liturgical language of the Assyrian Church of the East, Syriac Orthodox Church, Chaldean Catholic Church, and other churches of Syriac Christians. It is spoken in modern dialects with an estimated one million fluent speakers by endangered indigenous populations scattered throughout the Middle East, most commonly by the Assyrians, Gnostic Mandeans, the Arameans (Syriacs) of Maaloula and Jubb'adin, and Mizrahi Jews. There is also an Aramaic substratum in Levantine and Mesopotamian Arabic.

Phonology edit

Sound changes edit

Phonologically, Ugaritic lost the sound *ṣ́, replacing it with /sˁ/ () (the same shift occurred in Canaanite and Akkadian). That this same sound became /ʕ/ in Aramaic (although in Ancient Aramaic, it was written with qoph), suggests that Ugaritic is not the parent language of the group. An example of this sound shift can be seen in the word for earth: Ugaritic /ʔarsˁ/ (’arṣ), Punic /ʔarsˁ/ (’arṣ), Tiberian Hebrew /ʔɛrɛsˁ/ (’ereṣ), Biblical Hebrew /ʔarsˁ/ (’arṣ) and Aramaic /ʔarʕaː/ (’ar‘ā’).

The vowel shift from *aː to /oː/ distinguishes Canaanite from Ugaritic. Also, in the Canaanite group, the series of Semitic interdental fricatives become sibilants: (), () and *θ̣ () became /z/, /ʃ/ (š) and /sˤ/ () respectively. The effect of this sound shift can be seen by comparing the following words:

shift Ugaritic Aramaic Biblical Hebrew translation
()→/z/ 𐎏𐎐𐎁
ḏanabu⁠
דנבא‎
danḇā
זנב
zānāḇ
tail
()→/ʃ/ (š) 𐎘𐎍𐎘
ṯalāṯu
תלת
təlāṯ
שלש
šālōš
three
*θ̣ ()→/sˤ/ () 𐎑𐎍𐎍
ẓillu
טללא
ṭillālā
צל
ṣēl
shadow

Vowels edit

Proto-Northwest Semitic had three contrastive vowel qualities and a length distinction, resulting in six vocalic phonemes: *a, *ā, *i, *ī, *u, and *ū. While *aw, *ay, *iw, *iy, *uw, and *uy are often referred to as diphthongs, they do not seem to have had a different status as such, rather being a normal sequence of a short vowel and a glide.

Consonants edit

Suchard proposes that: "*s, both from original *s and original *ṯ, then shifted further back to a postalveolar *š, while deaffrication of *ts and *dz to *s and *z gave these phonemes their Hebrew values, as well as merging original *dz with original *ḏ. In fact, original *s may have been realized as anything between [s] and [ʃ]; both values are attested in foreign transcriptions of early Northwest Semitic languages".[citation needed]

Emphatics edit

In Proto-Northwest Semitic the emphatics were articulated with pharyngealization. Its shift to backing (as opposed to Proto-Semitic glottalization of emphatics) has been considered a Central Semitic innovation.[12]

According to Faber, the assimilation *-ṣt->-ṣṭ- in the Dt stem in Hebrew (hiṣṭaddēḳ ‘he declared himself righteous’) suggests backing rather than glottalization. The same assimilation is attested in Aramaic (yiṣṭabba ‘he will be moistened’).

Grammar edit

Nouns edit

Three cases can be reconstructed for Proto-Northwest Semitic nouns (nominative, accusative, genitive), two genders (masculine, feminine) and three numbers (single, dual, plural).[13]

Number/case ‘dog(s)’ (m.) ‘bitch(es)’ (f.)
sg.nominative *kalbu(m) *kalbatu(m)
sg.genitive *kalbi(m) *kalbati(m)
sg.accusative *kalba(m) *kalbata(m)
du.nominative *kalbā(na) *kalbatā(na)
du.genitive/accusative *kalbay(na) *kalbatay(na)
pl.nominative *kalabū(na) *kalabātu(m)
pl.genitive/accusative *kalabī(na) *kalabāti(m)

Pronouns edit

Proto-Northwest Semitic pronouns had 2 genders and 3 grammatical cases.

independent

nominative

enclitic
nominative genitive accusative
1.sg. *ʔanāku/ *ʔana *-tu *-ī, *-ya -nī
2.sg.masc. *ʔanta *-ka *-ta
2.sg.fem. *ʔanti *-ki *-ti
3.sg.masc. *hūʔa *-hu *-a
3.sg.fem. *hīʔa *-hā *-at
1.pl. *naḥnu/ *naḥnā *-nā
2.pl.masc. *ʔantum *-kum *-tum
2.pl.fem. *ʔantin *-kin *-tin
3.pl.masc. *hum(ū) *-hum *-ū
3.pl.fem. *hin(na) *-hin *-ā

Numerals edit

Reconstruction of Proto-Northwest Semitic numbers.

Number Masculine Feminine
One *ʔaḥadum *ʔaḥattum
Two *ṯnāna *ṯintāna
Three *ṯalāṯatum *ṯalāṯum
Four *ʔarbaʕatum *ʔarbaʕum
Five *ḫamisatum *ḫamisum
Six *siṯṯatum *siṯṯum
Seven *sabʕatum *sabʕum
Eight *ṯamāniyatum *ṯamāniyum
Nine *tisʕatum *tisʕum
Ten *ʕaśaratum *ʕaśrum

Verbs edit

Paradigm of the strong verb (G-stem)
Person/gender/number Suffix conjugation (Perfect) Meaning Prefix conjugations (Imperfect) Meaning
3m.sg *qaṭal-a 'he has killed' *ya-qṭul(-u/-a) 'he will kill'
3f.sg. *qaṭal-at 'she has killed' *ta-qṭul(-u/-a) 'she will kill'
2m.sg. *qaṭal-ta 'you have killed' *ta-qṭul(-u/-a) 'you will kill'
2f.sg *qaṭal-ti 'you have killed' *ta-qṭul-ī(-na) 'you will kill'
1sg. *qaṭal-tu 'I have killed' *ʔa-qṭul(-u/-a) 'I will kill'
3m.pl. *qaṭal-ū 'they have killed' *ya-qṭul-ū(-na) 'they will kill'
3f.pl. *qaṭal-ā 'they have killed' *ta-qṭul-na 'they will kill'
2m.pl. *qaṭal-tum 'you have killed' *ta-qṭul-ū(-na) 'you will kill'
2f.pl *qaṭal-tin 'you have killed' *ta-qṭul-na 'you will kill'
1pl. *qaṭal-nā 'we have killed' *na-qṭul(-u/-a) 'we will kill'

The G fientive or G-stem (Hebrew qal) is the basic, most common, unmarked stem. The G-stem expresses events. The vowel of the prefix of the prefix conjugations in Proto-Northwest Semitic was *-a- and the stem was *-qṭul- or *-qṭil-, as in *ya-qṭul-u 'he will kill', while the stem of the suffix conjugation had two *a vowels, as in *qaṭal-a 'he has killed'.

The G stative is like the fientive but expressing states instead of events. The prefix conjugation of stative roots, the vowel of the prefixes was *-i- and it contained and *a vowel, e.g. *yi-kbad-u 'he will become heavy', while the second vowel of the suffix conjugation was either *-i-, as in *kabid-a 'he is/was/will be heavy', or *-u-, as in *ʕamuq-a 'it is/was/will be deep'. Whether the G-stem stative suffix conjugation has *i or *u in the stem is lexically determined.

The N-stem (Hebrew nip̄ʕal) is marked by a prefixed *n(a)-. It is mediopassive which is a grammatical voice that subsumes the meanings of both the middle voice and the passive voice. In other words, it expresses a range of meanings where the subject is the patient of the verb, e.g. passive, medial, and reciprocal. The stem of the suffix conjugation is *naqṭaland the stem of the prefix conjugations is *-nqaṭil-; as is the case with stative Gstem verbs, the prefix vowel is *-i-, resulting in forms like *yi-nqaṭil-u 'he will be killed'.

The D-stem (Hebrew piʕel) is marked by gemination of the second radical in all forms. It has a range of different meanings, mostly transitive. The stem of the suffix conjugation is *qaṭṭil-, and the same stem is used for the prefix conjugations. It is not clear whether the Proto-Northwest-Semitic prefix vowel should be reconstructed as *-u-, the form inherited from Proto-Semitic (i.e. *yuqaṭṭil-u), or as *-a-, which is somewhat supported by evidence from Ugaritic and Hebrew (*yaqaṭṭil-u).

The C-stem (Hebrew hip̄ʕil) more often than not expresses a causative meaning. The most likely reconstructions are *haqṭil- (from older *saqṭil-) for the stem of the suffix conjugation and *-saqṭil- for the stem of the prefix conjugations. The reconstructed prefix vowel is the same as that of the D-stem, and similarly, the participle is to be reconstructed as *musaqṭilum.

All of the stems listed here, except the N-stem, could bring forth further derivation. The "internal passive stems" (Gp, Dp, and Cp; Hebrew passive qal, puʕal, and hɔp̄ʕal) aren't marked by affixes, but express their passivity through a different vowel pattern. The Gp prefix conjugation can be reconstructed as *yu-qṭal-u 'he will be killed'. Reflexive or reciprocal meanings can be expressed by the t-stems, formed with a *t which was either infixed after the first radical (Gt, Ct) or prefixed before it (tD).

The precise reconstruction are uncertain.

Proto-Northwest-Semitic verbal stems
G fientive G stative D C
perfect *qaṭal-a *kabid-a *qaṭṭil-a *ha-qṭil-a
imperfect *ya-qṭul-u *yi-kbad-u *yV-qaṭṭil-u *yVsa-qṭil-u
participle *qāṭil-um *kabid-um *mu-qaṭṭil-um *musa-qṭil-um
Gp N Dp Cp
perfect *quṭVl-a *na-qṭal-a *quṭṭVl-a *hu-qṭVl-a
imperfect *yu-qṭal-u *yin-qaṭil-u *yu-qVṭṭal-u *yusV-qṭal-u
participle *qaṭīl-um, *qaṭūl-um *na-qṭal-um or *mun-qaṭil-um? *mu-qVṭṭal-um *musV-qṭal-um
Gt tD Ct
perfect *qtaṭVl-a? *ta-qaṭṭVl-a *sta-qṭVl-a?
imperfect *yi-qtaṭVl-u *yVt-qaṭṭVl-u *yVsta-qṭVl-u
participle *mu-qtaṭVl-um *mut-qaṭṭVl-um *musta-qṭVl-um

Conjunctions edit

  • *wa, 'and'
  • *pa/ʔap, 'and then, and so'
  • *ʔaw, 'or'
  • *huʼāti and *hiʼāti, direct object markers
  • *ha, 'to, for'
  • *ka also *kī, (and *kaj?) 'like, as'
  • *bal, 'without, non-'
  • *bi, 'in, with'
  • *la, 'to, for' (dat/dir)
  • *min(V), 'from'
  • *ʕad(aj), 'up to, until'
  • *ʕal(aj), 'on, against'
  • *jiθ, 'there is/are'

Notes edit

  1. ^ Aaron D. Rubin (2008). "The subgrouping of the Semitic languages". Language and Linguistics Compass. 2 (1): 61–84. doi:10.1111/j.1749-818x.2007.00044.x.
  2. ^ a b The Semitic Languages: An International Handbook, Chapter V, page 425
  3. ^ Kurzgefasste vergleichende Grammatik der semitischen Sprachen, Elemente der Laut- und Formenlehre (1908), quote "Das Westsemitische gliedert sich in zwei Hauptgruppen, das Nord- und das Südwestsemitische... Das Nordwestsemitische umfaßt das Kanaanäische und das Aramäische...Das Südwest semitische umfaßt das Arabische und Abessinische."
  4. ^ Linguist List Central Semitic composite tree (with Aramaic and Canaanite grouped together in Northwest Semitic, and Arabic and Old South Arabian as sisters) 2009-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
    Linguist List bibliography of sources for composite tree 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine
    Rubin, Aaron D. 2007. The Subgrouping of the Semitic Languages, Language and Linguistics Compass, vol. 1.
    Huehnergard, John. 2004. "Afro-Asiatic," The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages (Cambridge, pp. 138–159).
    Faber, Alice. 1997. "Genetic Subgrouping of the Semitic Languages," The Semitic Languages (Routledge, pp. 3–15)
    Huehnergard, John. 1991. "Remarks on the Classification of the Northwest Semitic Languages," The Balaam Text from Deir 'Alla Re-evaluated (Brill, pp. 282–293).
    Huehnergard, John. 1992. "Languages of the Ancient Near East," The Anchor Bible Dictionary, Volume 4, pp. 155–170.
    Voigt, Rainer M. 1987. "The Classification of Central Semitic," Journal of Semitic Studies 32:1–19.
    Goldenberg, Gideon. 1977. "The Semitic Languages of Ethiopia and Their Classification," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 40:461–507.
    Ethnologue Central Semitic entry (with Arabic and Canaanite grouped together against Aramaic)
    The Ethnologue classification is based on Hetzron, Robert. 1987. "Semitic Languages," The World's Major Languages (Oxford, pp. 654–663).
    The older grouping of Arabic with South Semitic was "based on cultural and geographical principles", not on principles of empirical historical linguistics (Faber, 1997, pg. 5). "However, more recently, [Arabic] has been grouped instead with Canaanite and Aramaic, under the rubric Central Semitic..., and this classification is certainly more appropriate for Ancient North Arabian" (Macdonald, M.C.A. 2004. "Ancient North Arabian," The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages Cambridge, pp. 488–533. Quote on pg. 489).
  5. ^ "Semitic". Ethnologue. SIL International. Retrieved 2014-06-02.
  6. ^ Huehnergard, John (1995). "What is Aramaic?". Aram (7): 282.
  7. ^ Kogan, Leonid (2015). Genealogical Classification of Semitic. de Gruyter. p. 601. doi:10.1515/9781614515494. ISBN 9781614517269.
  8. ^ Kootstra, Fokelien. "The Language of the Taymanitic Inscriptions and its Classification". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ Edwin JEANS (1860). A Catalogue of Books, in all Branches of Literature, both Ancient & Modern ... on sale at E. Jeans's, bookseller ... Norwich. J. Fletcher. pp. 33–.
  10. ^ Steiner, Richard C. (2011). Early Northwest Semitic Serpent Spells in the Pyramid Texts. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 9789004369214.
  11. ^ Huehnergard, John & Pat-El, Na'ama (2019). The Semitic Languages. Routledge. pp. 11–12. ISBN 9780429655388.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Hetzron, Robert (2011). The Semitic Languages An International Handbook. De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 1.3.1.3. ISBN 9783110186130.
  13. ^ Suchard, Benjamin (2019). The Development of the Biblical Hebrew Vowels: Including a Concise Historical Morphology. Brill. pp. 37–50. ISBN 978-90-04-39025-6.

Bibliography edit

  • Blau, J. 1968. "Some Difficulties in the Reconstruction of 'Proto-Hebrew' and 'Proto-Canaanite'," in In Memoriam Paul Kahle. BZAW, 103. pp. 29–43
  • Cross, F. M. 1965. “The Development of the Jewish Scripts,” in The Bible and the Ancient Near East: Essays in Honor of W. F. Albright, ed. G. E. Wright. New York. Reprinted 1965, Anchor Book Edition; New York, pp. 133–202.
  • Cross, F. M. 1967. “The Origin and Early Evolution of the Alphabet,” EI 5: 8*-24*.
  • Cross, F. M. 1982. “Alphabets and pots: Reflections on typological method in the dating of human artifacts,” MAARAV 3: 121–136.
  • Cross, F. M. 1989. “The Invention and Development of the Alphabet,” in The Origins of Writing (ed. W. M. Senner; Lincoln: University of Nebraska), pp. 77–90.
  • Cross, F. M. and Freedman, D. N. 1952. Early Hebrew Orthography: A Study of the Epigraphic Evidence New Haven: American Oriental Society.
  • Daniels, Peter. 1996. The World’s Writing Systems. New York: Oxford.
  • de Moor, Johannes C. 1988. "Narrative Poetry in Canaan," UF 20:149–171.
  • Donner, H. and Rollig, W. 1962–64. Kanaanäische und aramäische Inschriften. 3 volumes. Wiesbaden. (5th ed.)
  • Driver, G. R. 1976. Semitic Writing: From Pictograph to Alphabet. 3rd edition. London.
  • Garbini, G. 1960. Il Semitico di nord-ovest. (And a critique by E.Y. Kutscher, JSS 10 (1965):21–51.)
  • Garnier, Romain; Jacques, Guillaume (2012). "A neglected phonetic law: The assimilation of pretonic yod to a following coronal in North-West Semitic". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 75 (1): 135–145. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.395.1033. doi:10.1017/s0041977x11001261. S2CID 16649580.
  • Garr, R. 1985. Dialect Geography of Syria-Palestine, 1000-586 B.C.E. Philadelphia: UPenn.
  • Gelb, I. J. 1961. “The Early History of the West Semitic Peoples,” JCS 15:27-47.
  • Gelb, I. J. 1963. A Study of Writing. 2nd edition. Chicago.
  • Gibson, J. C. L. 1971–87. Textbook of Syrian Semitic Inscriptions. 3 Vols. Oxford: Clarendon.
  • Ginsberg, H. L. 1970. “The Northwest Semitic Languages,” in The World History of the Jewish People, volume 1/2: Patriarches. Tel Aviv.
  • Greenfield, J. C. 1969. “Amurrite, Ugaritic and Canaanite,” in Proceedings of the International Conference of Semitic Studies. Jerusalem. pp. 92–101.
  • Halpern, B. 1987. “Dialect Distribution in Canaan and the Deir Alla Inscriptions,” in “Working with No Data”: Semitic and Egyptian Studies Presented to Thomas O. Lambdin. Ed. D. M. Golomb. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns. pp. 119–39.
  • Harris, Z. 1939. Development of the Canaanite Dialects. AOS, 16. New Haven: AOS.
  • Herr, Larry G. 1980. "The Formal Scripts of Iron Age Transjordan," BASOR 238:21–34.
  • Hoftijzer, J. and Jongeling, K. 1995. Dictionary of the North-West Semitic inscriptions. 2 volumes. Leiden/New York: Brill. Not including Ugaritic.
  • Huehnergard, J. 1990. "Remarks on the Classification of the Northwest Semitic Languages," in The Balaam Text from Deir Alla Re-evaluated: proceedings of the international symposium held at Leiden, 21–24 August 1989. pp. 282–93.
  • Kaufman, S. A. 1988. “The Classification of North West Semitic Dialects of the Biblical Period and Some Implications Thereof,” in Proceedings of the Ninth World Congress of Jewish Studies (Panel Sessions: Hebrew and Aramaic Languages). Jerusalem: World Union of Jewish Studies. pp. 41–57.
  • Moran, William L. 1961. “The Hebrew Language in its Northwest Semitic Background,” in The Bible and the Ancient Near East: Essays in Honor of W. F. Albright, ed. G. E. Wright. New York. Reprinted 1965, Anchor Book Edition; New York, pp. 59–84.
  • Moran, William L. 1975. “The Syrian Scribe of the Jerusalem Amarna Letters,” in Unity and Diversity: Essays in the History, Literature, and Religion of the Ancient Near East (ed. H. Goedicke and J. J. M. Roberts; Baltimore/London: Johns Hopkins University Press) 146–166.
  • Moscati, Sabatino, ed. 1969. An Introduction to the Comparative Grammar of the Semitic Languages: Phonology and Morphology. Porta Linguarum Orientalium, ns, 6. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
  • Naveh, J. 1987. Early History of the Alphabet: An Introduction to West Semitic Epigraphy and Palaeography. 2nd edition. Jerusalem: Magnes. Especially sections on West Semitic.
  • Parker, Simon B. 1997. Stories in Scripture and Inscriptions: Comparative Studies on Narratives in Northwest Semitic Inscriptions and the Hebrew Bible. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Rabin, C. 1971. "Semitic Languages," Encyclopaedia Judaica, volume 14, pp. 1149–57.
  • Rabin, C. 1991. Semitic Languages (Jerusalem: Bialik). [in Hebrew]
  • Rainey, A. F. 1986 “The Ancient Hebrew Prefix Conjugation in the Light of Amarnah Canaanite,” Hebrew Studies 27:1–19.
  • Rainey, A. F. 1990. “The Prefix Conjugation Patterns of Early Northwest Semitic,” pp. 407–420 in Abusch, Tz., Huehnergard, J. and Steinkeller, P., eds. Lingering over Words, Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honor of William L. Moran. Atlanta: Scholars.
  • Renz, J. 1995. Handbuch der althebräischen Epigraphik. 3 volumes. Darmstadt.
  • Suchard, B. 2019. "The Development of the Biblical Hebrew Vowels: Including a Concise Historical Morphology". Brill, pp. 37–50, 232–252
  • Vaughn, A. 1999. "Palaeographic Dating of Judean Seals and Its Significance for Biblical Research", BASOR, 313:43–64.

northwest, semitic, languages, northwest, semitic, division, semitic, languages, comprising, indigenous, languages, levant, emerged, from, proto, semitic, early, bronze, first, attested, proper, names, identified, amorite, middle, bronze, oldest, coherent, tex. Northwest Semitic is a division of the Semitic languages comprising the indigenous languages of the Levant It emerged from Proto Semitic in the Early Bronze Age It is first attested in proper names identified as Amorite in the Middle Bronze Age The oldest coherent texts are in Ugaritic dating to the Late Bronze Age which by the time of the Bronze Age collapse are joined by Old Aramaic and by the Iron Age by Sutean and the Canaanite languages Phoenician Punic Edomite Moabite and Hebrew 1 Northwest SemiticLevantineGeographicdistributionConcentrated in the Middle EastLinguistic classificationAfro AsiaticSemiticWest SemiticCentral SemiticNorthwest SemiticSubdivisionsAramaic Canaanite Ugaritic Amorite Samalian Taymanitic Glottolognort3165The term was coined by Carl Brockelmann in 1908 2 who separated Fritz Hommel s 1883 classification of Semitic languages 2 into Northwest Canaanite and Aramaic East Semitic Akkadian its Assyrian and Babylonian dialects Eblaite and Southwest Arabic Old South Arabian languages and Abyssinian 3 Brockelmann s Canaanite sub group includes Ugaritic Phoenician and Hebrew Some scholars now regard Ugaritic either as belonging to a separate branch of Northwest Semitic alongside Canaanite or a dialect of Amorite Central Semitic is a proposed intermediate group comprising Northwest Semitic and Arabic Central Semitic is either a subgroup of West Semitic or a top level division of Semitic alongside East Semitic and South Semitic 4 SIL Ethnologue in its system of classification of living languages only eliminates Northwest Semitic entirely by joining Canaanite and Arabic in a South Central group which together with Aramaic forms Central Semitic 5 The Deir Alla Inscription and Samalian have been identified as language varieties falling outside Aramaic proper but with some similarities to it possibly in an Aramoid or Syrian subgroup 6 7 It is clear that the Taymanitic script expressed a distinct linguistic variety that is not Arabic and not closely related to Hismaic or Safaitic while it can tentatively be suggested that it was more closely related to Northwest Semitic 8 Contents 1 Historical development 2 Phonology 2 1 Sound changes 2 2 Vowels 2 3 Consonants 2 4 Emphatics 3 Grammar 3 1 Nouns 3 2 Pronouns 3 3 Numerals 3 4 Verbs 3 4 1 Conjunctions 4 Notes 5 BibliographyHistorical development edit nbsp Aramaic alphabets nbsp Phoenician alphabetsComparison of Northwest Semitic scripts by Mark Lidzbarski in 1898 nbsp Charles Morton s 1759 updated version of Edward Bernard s Orbis eruditi 9 comparing all known alphabets as of 1689 including Northwest Semitic which is described as Adami Noachi Nini Abrahami Phoenicum et Samaritarum ante Christe 5509 a nummis Iudaicis Africanisque Pentateucho Mosis The time period for the split of Northwest Semitic from Proto Semitic or from other Semitic groups is uncertain it has been recently suggested by Richard C Steiner that the earliest attestation of Northwest Semitic is to be found in snake spells from the Egyptian Pyramid Texts dating to the mid third millennium BCE 10 Amorite personal names and words in Akkadian and Egyptian texts from the late third millennium to the mid second millennium BCE and the language of the Proto Sinaitic inscriptions dated to the first half of the second millennium otherwise constitute the earliest traces of Northwest Semitic the first Northwest Semitic language attested in full being Ugaritic in the 14th century BCE 11 During the early 1st millennium the Phoenician language was spread throughout the Mediterranean by Phoenician colonists most notably to Carthage in today s Tunisia The Phoenician alphabet is of fundamental importance in human history as the source and ancestor of the Greek alphabet the later Latin alphabet the Aramaic Square Hebrew Syriac and Arabic writing systems Germanic runes and ultimately Cyrillic From the 8th century BCE the use of Imperial Aramaic by the Neo Assyrian Empire 935 608 BC and the succeeding Neo Babylonian Empire 612 539 BC and Achaemenid Empire 539 332 BC a form of the Aramaic language spread throughout the Northwest Semitic region of the Levant northern regions of the Arabian peninsula and southern regions of Anatolia and gradually drove most of the other Northwest Semitic languages to extinction The ancient Judaeans adopted Aramaic for daily use and parts of the Tanakh are written in it Hebrew was preserved however as a Jewish liturgical language and language of scholarship and resurrected in the 19th century with modern adaptations to become the Modern Hebrew language of the State of Israel After the Muslim conquests of the 7th century Arabic began to gradually replace Aramaic throughout the region Classical Syriac Aramaic survives today as the liturgical language of the Assyrian Church of the East Syriac Orthodox Church Chaldean Catholic Church and other churches of Syriac Christians It is spoken in modern dialects with an estimated one million fluent speakers by endangered indigenous populations scattered throughout the Middle East most commonly by the Assyrians Gnostic Mandeans the Arameans Syriacs of Maaloula and Jubb adin and Mizrahi Jews There is also an Aramaic substratum in Levantine and Mesopotamian Arabic Phonology editSound changes edit Phonologically Ugaritic lost the sound ṣ replacing it with sˁ ṣ the same shift occurred in Canaanite and Akkadian That this same sound became ʕ in Aramaic although in Ancient Aramaic it was written with qoph suggests that Ugaritic is not the parent language of the group An example of this sound shift can be seen in the word for earth Ugaritic ʔarsˁ arṣ Punic ʔarsˁ arṣ Tiberian Hebrew ʔɛrɛsˁ ereṣ Biblical Hebrew ʔarsˁ arṣ and Aramaic ʔarʕaː ar a The vowel shift from aː to oː distinguishes Canaanite from Ugaritic Also in the Canaanite group the series of Semitic interdental fricatives become sibilants d ḏ 8 ṯ and 8 ṱ became z ʃ s and sˤ ṣ respectively The effect of this sound shift can be seen by comparing the following words shift Ugaritic Aramaic Biblical Hebrew translation d ḏ z 𐎏𐎐𐎁ḏanabu דנבא danḇa זנבzanaḇ tail 8 ṯ ʃ s 𐎘𐎍𐎘ṯalaṯu תלתtelaṯ שלשsalōs three 8 ẓ sˤ ṣ 𐎑𐎍𐎍ẓillu טללאṭillala צלṣel shadowVowels edit Proto Northwest Semitic had three contrastive vowel qualities and a length distinction resulting in six vocalic phonemes a a i i u and u While aw ay iw iy uw and uy are often referred to as diphthongs they do not seem to have had a different status as such rather being a normal sequence of a short vowel and a glide Consonants edit Proto Northwest Semitic consonant phonemes Type Manner Voicing Labial Interdental Alveolar Lateral Postalveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal GlottalObstruent Stop voiceless p p t t k k emphatic ṭ tˤ q ḳ kˤ ʼ ˀ ʔ voiced b b d d g ɡ Fricative voiceless ṯ 8 s t s s ɬ s s ʃ ḫ x x ḥ ħ h h emphatic ṯ 8 ẓ t 8ˤ ṣ t sˤ ṣ ḏ t ɬˤ voiced ḏ d z d z ġ ǵ ɣ ʁ ʻ ˤ ʕ Resonant Trill r r Approximant w w l l y j Nasal m m n n Suchard proposes that s both from original s and original ṯ then shifted further back to a postalveolar s while deaffrication of ts and dz to s and z gave these phonemes their Hebrew values as well as merging original dz with original ḏ In fact original s may have been realized as anything between s and ʃ both values are attested in foreign transcriptions of early Northwest Semitic languages citation needed Emphatics edit In Proto Northwest Semitic the emphatics were articulated with pharyngealization Its shift to backing as opposed to Proto Semitic glottalization of emphatics has been considered a Central Semitic innovation 12 According to Faber the assimilation ṣt gt ṣṭ in the Dt stem in Hebrew hiṣṭaddeḳ he declared himself righteous suggests backing rather than glottalization The same assimilation is attested in Aramaic yiṣṭabba he will be moistened Grammar editNouns edit Three cases can be reconstructed for Proto Northwest Semitic nouns nominative accusative genitive two genders masculine feminine and three numbers single dual plural 13 Number case dog s m bitch es f sg nominative kalbu m kalbatu m sg genitive kalbi m kalbati m sg accusative kalba m kalbata m du nominative kalba na kalbata na du genitive accusative kalbay na kalbatay na pl nominative kalabu na kalabatu m pl genitive accusative kalabi na kalabati m Pronouns edit Proto Northwest Semitic pronouns had 2 genders and 3 grammatical cases independent nominative encliticnominative genitive accusative1 sg ʔanaku ʔana tu i ya ni2 sg masc ʔanta ka ta2 sg fem ʔanti ki ti3 sg masc huʔa hu a3 sg fem hiʔa ha at1 pl naḥnu naḥna na2 pl masc ʔantum kum tum2 pl fem ʔantin kin tin3 pl masc hum u hum u3 pl fem hin na hin aNumerals edit Reconstruction of Proto Northwest Semitic numbers Number Masculine FeminineOne ʔaḥadum ʔaḥattumTwo ṯnana ṯintanaThree ṯalaṯatum ṯalaṯumFour ʔarbaʕatum ʔarbaʕumFive ḫamisatum ḫamisumSix siṯṯatum siṯṯumSeven sabʕatum sabʕumEight ṯamaniyatum ṯamaniyumNine tisʕatum tisʕumTen ʕasaratum ʕasrumVerbs edit Paradigm of the strong verb G stem Person gender number Suffix conjugation Perfect Meaning Prefix conjugations Imperfect Meaning3m sg qaṭal a he has killed ya qṭul u a he will kill 3f sg qaṭal at she has killed ta qṭul u a she will kill 2m sg qaṭal ta you have killed ta qṭul u a you will kill 2f sg qaṭal ti you have killed ta qṭul i na you will kill 1sg qaṭal tu I have killed ʔa qṭul u a I will kill 3m pl qaṭal u they have killed ya qṭul u na they will kill 3f pl qaṭal a they have killed ta qṭul na they will kill 2m pl qaṭal tum you have killed ta qṭul u na you will kill 2f pl qaṭal tin you have killed ta qṭul na you will kill 1pl qaṭal na we have killed na qṭul u a we will kill The G fientive or G stem Hebrew qal is the basic most common unmarked stem The G stem expresses events The vowel of the prefix of the prefix conjugations in Proto Northwest Semitic was a and the stem was qṭul or qṭil as in ya qṭul u he will kill while the stem of the suffix conjugation had two a vowels as in qaṭal a he has killed The G stative is like the fientive but expressing states instead of events The prefix conjugation of stative roots the vowel of the prefixes was i and it contained and a vowel e g yi kbad u he will become heavy while the second vowel of the suffix conjugation was either i as in kabid a he is was will be heavy or u as in ʕamuq a it is was will be deep Whether the G stem stative suffix conjugation has i or u in the stem is lexically determined The N stem Hebrew nip ʕal is marked by a prefixed n a It is mediopassive which is a grammatical voice that subsumes the meanings of both the middle voice and the passive voice In other words it expresses a range of meanings where the subject is the patient of the verb e g passive medial and reciprocal The stem of the suffix conjugation is naqṭaland the stem of the prefix conjugations is nqaṭil as is the case with stative Gstem verbs the prefix vowel is i resulting in forms like yi nqaṭil u he will be killed The D stem Hebrew piʕel is marked by gemination of the second radical in all forms It has a range of different meanings mostly transitive The stem of the suffix conjugation is qaṭṭil and the same stem is used for the prefix conjugations It is not clear whether the Proto Northwest Semitic prefix vowel should be reconstructed as u the form inherited from Proto Semitic i e yuqaṭṭil u or as a which is somewhat supported by evidence from Ugaritic and Hebrew yaqaṭṭil u The C stem Hebrew hip ʕil more often than not expresses a causative meaning The most likely reconstructions are haqṭil from older saqṭil for the stem of the suffix conjugation and saqṭil for the stem of the prefix conjugations The reconstructed prefix vowel is the same as that of the D stem and similarly the participle is to be reconstructed as musaqṭilum All of the stems listed here except the N stem could bring forth further derivation The internal passive stems Gp Dp and Cp Hebrew passive qal puʕal and hɔp ʕal aren t marked by affixes but express their passivity through a different vowel pattern The Gp prefix conjugation can be reconstructed as yu qṭal u he will be killed Reflexive or reciprocal meanings can be expressed by the t stems formed with a t which was either infixed after the first radical Gt Ct or prefixed before it tD The precise reconstruction are uncertain Proto Northwest Semitic verbal stems G fientive G stative D Cperfect qaṭal a kabid a qaṭṭil a ha qṭil aimperfect ya qṭul u yi kbad u yV qaṭṭil u yVsa qṭil uparticiple qaṭil um kabid um mu qaṭṭil um musa qṭil umGp N Dp Cpperfect quṭVl a na qṭal a quṭṭVl a hu qṭVl aimperfect yu qṭal u yin qaṭil u yu qVṭṭal u yusV qṭal uparticiple qaṭil um qaṭul um na qṭal um or mun qaṭil um mu qVṭṭal um musV qṭal umGt tD Ctperfect qtaṭVl a ta qaṭṭVl a sta qṭVl a imperfect yi qtaṭVl u yVt qaṭṭVl u yVsta qṭVl uparticiple mu qtaṭVl um mut qaṭṭVl um musta qṭVl umConjunctions edit wa and pa ʔap and then and so ʔaw or huʼati and hiʼati direct object markers ha to for ka also ki and kaj like as bal without non bi in with la to for dat dir min V from ʕad aj up to until ʕal aj on against ji8 there is are Notes edit Aaron D Rubin 2008 The subgrouping of the Semitic languages Language and Linguistics Compass 2 1 61 84 doi 10 1111 j 1749 818x 2007 00044 x a b The Semitic Languages An International Handbook Chapter V page 425 Kurzgefasste vergleichende Grammatik der semitischen Sprachen Elemente der Laut und Formenlehre 1908 quote Das Westsemitische gliedert sich in zwei Hauptgruppen das Nord und das Sudwestsemitische Das Nordwestsemitische umfasst das Kanaanaische und das Aramaische Das Sudwest semitische umfasst das Arabische und Abessinische Linguist List Central Semitic composite tree with Aramaic and Canaanite grouped together in Northwest Semitic and Arabic and Old South Arabian as sisters Archived 2009 10 14 at the Wayback MachineLinguist List bibliography of sources for composite tree Archived 2011 07 23 at the Wayback MachineRubin Aaron D 2007 The Subgrouping of the Semitic Languages Language and Linguistics Compass vol 1 Huehnergard John 2004 Afro Asiatic The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages Cambridge pp 138 159 Faber Alice 1997 Genetic Subgrouping of the Semitic Languages The Semitic Languages Routledge pp 3 15 Huehnergard John 1991 Remarks on the Classification of the Northwest Semitic Languages The Balaam Text from Deir Alla Re evaluated Brill pp 282 293 Huehnergard John 1992 Languages of the Ancient Near East The Anchor Bible Dictionary Volume 4 pp 155 170 Voigt Rainer M 1987 The Classification of Central Semitic Journal of Semitic Studies 32 1 19 Goldenberg Gideon 1977 The Semitic Languages of Ethiopia and Their Classification Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 40 461 507 Ethnologue Central Semitic entry with Arabic and Canaanite grouped together against Aramaic The Ethnologue classification is based on Hetzron Robert 1987 Semitic Languages The World s Major Languages Oxford pp 654 663 The older grouping of Arabic with South Semitic was based on cultural and geographical principles not on principles of empirical historical linguistics Faber 1997 pg 5 However more recently Arabic has been grouped instead with Canaanite and Aramaic under the rubric Central Semitic and this classification is certainly more appropriate for Ancient North Arabian Macdonald M C A 2004 Ancient North Arabian The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages Cambridge pp 488 533 Quote on pg 489 Semitic Ethnologue SIL International Retrieved 2014 06 02 Huehnergard John 1995 What is Aramaic Aram 7 282 Kogan Leonid 2015 Genealogical Classification of Semitic de Gruyter p 601 doi 10 1515 9781614515494 ISBN 9781614517269 Kootstra Fokelien The Language of the Taymanitic Inscriptions and its Classification a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Edwin JEANS 1860 A Catalogue of Books in all Branches of Literature both Ancient amp Modern on sale at E Jeans s bookseller Norwich J Fletcher pp 33 Steiner Richard C 2011 Early Northwest Semitic Serpent Spells in the Pyramid Texts Eisenbrauns ISBN 9789004369214 Huehnergard John amp Pat El Na ama 2019 The Semitic Languages Routledge pp 11 12 ISBN 9780429655388 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hetzron Robert 2011 The Semitic Languages An International Handbook De Gruyter Mouton pp 1 3 1 3 ISBN 9783110186130 Suchard Benjamin 2019 The Development of the Biblical Hebrew Vowels Including a Concise Historical Morphology Brill pp 37 50 ISBN 978 90 04 39025 6 Bibliography editBlau J 1968 Some Difficulties in the Reconstruction of Proto Hebrew and Proto Canaanite in In Memoriam Paul Kahle BZAW 103 pp 29 43 Cross F M 1965 The Development of the Jewish Scripts in The Bible and the Ancient Near East Essays in Honor of W F Albright ed G E Wright New York Reprinted 1965 Anchor Book Edition New York pp 133 202 Cross F M 1967 The Origin and Early Evolution of the Alphabet EI 5 8 24 Cross F M 1982 Alphabets and pots Reflections on typological method in the dating of human artifacts MAARAV 3 121 136 Cross F M 1989 The Invention and Development of the Alphabet in The Origins of Writing ed W M Senner Lincoln University of Nebraska pp 77 90 Cross F M and Freedman D N 1952 Early Hebrew Orthography A Study of the Epigraphic Evidence New Haven American Oriental Society Daniels Peter 1996 The World s Writing Systems New York Oxford de Moor Johannes C 1988 Narrative Poetry in Canaan UF 20 149 171 Donner H and Rollig W 1962 64 Kanaanaische und aramaische Inschriften 3 volumes Wiesbaden 5th ed Driver G R 1976 Semitic Writing From Pictograph to Alphabet 3rd edition London Garbini G 1960 Il Semitico di nord ovest And a critique by E Y Kutscher JSS 10 1965 21 51 Garnier Romain Jacques Guillaume 2012 A neglected phonetic law The assimilation of pretonic yod to a following coronal in North West Semitic Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 75 1 135 145 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 395 1033 doi 10 1017 s0041977x11001261 S2CID 16649580 Garr R 1985 Dialect Geography of Syria Palestine 1000 586 B C E Philadelphia UPenn Gelb I J 1961 The Early History of the West Semitic Peoples JCS 15 27 47 Gelb I J 1963 A Study of Writing 2nd edition Chicago Gibson J C L 1971 87 Textbook of Syrian Semitic Inscriptions 3 Vols Oxford Clarendon Ginsberg H L 1970 The Northwest Semitic Languages in The World History of the Jewish People volume 1 2 Patriarches Tel Aviv Greenfield J C 1969 Amurrite Ugaritic and Canaanite in Proceedings of the International Conference of Semitic Studies Jerusalem pp 92 101 Halpern B 1987 Dialect Distribution in Canaan and the Deir Alla Inscriptions in Working with No Data Semitic and Egyptian Studies Presented to Thomas O Lambdin Ed D M Golomb Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns pp 119 39 Harris Z 1939 Development of the Canaanite Dialects AOS 16 New Haven AOS Herr Larry G 1980 The Formal Scripts of Iron Age Transjordan BASOR 238 21 34 Hoftijzer J and Jongeling K 1995 Dictionary of the North West Semitic inscriptions 2 volumes Leiden New York Brill Not including Ugaritic Huehnergard J 1990 Remarks on the Classification of the Northwest Semitic Languages in The Balaam Text from Deir Alla Re evaluated proceedings of the international symposium held at Leiden 21 24 August 1989 pp 282 93 Kaufman S A 1988 The Classification of North West Semitic Dialects of the Biblical Period and Some Implications Thereof in Proceedings of the Ninth World Congress of Jewish Studies Panel Sessions Hebrew and Aramaic Languages Jerusalem World Union of Jewish Studies pp 41 57 Moran William L 1961 The Hebrew Language in its Northwest Semitic Background in The Bible and the Ancient Near East Essays in Honor of W F Albright ed G E Wright New York Reprinted 1965 Anchor Book Edition New York pp 59 84 Moran William L 1975 The Syrian Scribe of the Jerusalem Amarna Letters in Unity and Diversity Essays in the History Literature and Religion of the Ancient Near East ed H Goedicke and J J M Roberts Baltimore London Johns Hopkins University Press 146 166 Moscati Sabatino ed 1969 An Introduction to the Comparative Grammar of the Semitic Languages Phonology and Morphology Porta Linguarum Orientalium ns 6 Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Naveh J 1987 Early History of the Alphabet An Introduction to West Semitic Epigraphy and Palaeography 2nd edition Jerusalem Magnes Especially sections on West Semitic Parker Simon B 1997 Stories in Scripture and Inscriptions Comparative Studies on Narratives in Northwest Semitic Inscriptions and the Hebrew Bible Oxford Oxford University Press Rabin C 1971 Semitic Languages Encyclopaedia Judaica volume 14 pp 1149 57 Rabin C 1991 Semitic Languages Jerusalem Bialik in Hebrew Rainey A F 1986 The Ancient Hebrew Prefix Conjugation in the Light of Amarnah Canaanite Hebrew Studies 27 1 19 Rainey A F 1990 The Prefix Conjugation Patterns of Early Northwest Semitic pp 407 420 in Abusch Tz Huehnergard J and Steinkeller P eds Lingering over Words Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honor of William L Moran Atlanta Scholars Renz J 1995 Handbuch der althebraischen Epigraphik 3 volumes Darmstadt Suchard B 2019 The Development of the Biblical Hebrew Vowels Including a Concise Historical Morphology Brill pp 37 50 232 252 Vaughn A 1999 Palaeographic Dating of Judean Seals and Its Significance for Biblical Research BASOR 313 43 64 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northwest Semitic languages amp oldid 1186618557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.