Encyclopedia > Semitic languages

  Article Content

Semitic language

Redirected from Semitic languages

Semitic languages are a subfamily of the Afro-Asiatic languages. The most common Semitic languages spoken today are Arabic, Amharic, Hebrew, and Tigrinya.

The Central Semitic languages

The South Semitic languages

The Eastern Semitic Languages

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

gdl means "big" but is no part of speech and not a word, just a root
gadol means "big" and is an adjective
giddel means "he magnified"
magdelet means "magnifier" (lens)

spr is the root for "count" or "recount"
sefer means "book" (containing tales which are recounted)
sofer means "scribe" (Masoretic scribes counted verses)
mispar means "number".

Other Afro-Asiatic languages show similar patterns; e.g. in Tamashek Tawa akhluk means "creation" and ikhlakdu "he created".



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Reformed churches

... from the CRC in the 1920s in a schism over the issue of common grace. Reformed Church in the United States[?] (German Reformed) Reformed Church in America[?] (Dutch ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 29.2 ms