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Northwest Semitic Languages Information

The Northwest Semitic languages form a medium-level division of the Semitic language family. The languages of this group are spoken by approximately eight million people today. The group is generally divided into three branches: Ugaritic (extinct), Canaanite (including Hebrew) and Aramaic. Semiticists group the Northwest Semitic languages together with Arabic to form the larger Central Semitic group.[1]

The extinct Ugaritic language is the earliest witness to Northwest Semitic. Phonologically, Ugaritic has lost the sound *ṣ́, replacing it with /sˤ/ () (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 /ʔarsˤ/ (’arṣ), Hebrew /ʔɛrɛsˤ/ (’ereṣ) and Aramaic /ʔarʕaː/ (’ar‘ā’).

Prior to the spread of Aramaic during the Neo-Assyrian Empire (934-608 BC, see also Imperial Aramaic), they were spoken throughout the area that is covered by modern-day Israel, Palestine,[2] Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and the Sinai. The vowel shift from *aː to /oː/ distinguishes Canaanite from Ugaritic. Also, in the Canaanite group, the series of Semitic interdental fricatives become sibilants: *ð (), *θ () 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
*ð ()→/z/ ḏhb דהב /dəhab/ (dəhaḇ) זהב /zaˈhab/ zahab gold
*θ ()→/ʃ/ (š) ṯlṯ תלת /təlaːt/ (təlāṯ) שלוש/שלש /ʃaˈloʃ/ šaloš three
*θ̣ ()→/sˤ/ () ṱw טור /tˤuːr/ (ṭûr) צור /sˤur/ çur (ṣur) mountain

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Linguist List Central Semitic composite tree (with Aramaic and Canaanite grouped together in Northwest Semitic, and Arabic and Old South Arabian as sisters) Linguist List bibliography of sources for composite tree 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).
  2. ^ See List of sovereign states for recognition information

Bibliography

The Northwest Semitic abjad
ʾ b g d h w z y k l m n s ʿ p q r š t
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 200 300 400
historyPhoenicianAramaicHebrewSyriacArabic
Semitic languages
East
Akkadian · Eblaite
West · Central
Northwest
Canaanite
Hebrew Biblical · Mishnaic · Medieval · Mizrahi · Yemenite · Sephardi · Ashkenazi · Samaritan · Modern
Phoenician Punic
Others Ammonite · Moabite · Edomite
Aramaic
Western
Western Middle Jewish Middle Palestinian · Samaritan · Christian Palestinian
Eastern Biblical · Hatran · Syriac · Jewish Babylonian Aramaic · Chaldean Neo-Aramaic · Assyrian Neo-Aramaic · Senaya · Koy Sanjaq Surat · Hértevin · Turoyo · Mlahsô · Mandaic · Judeo-Aramaic
Others Nabataean · Western Neo-Aramaic
Others Amorite · Eteocypriot · Ugaritic
Arabic
Literary Classical · Modern Standard
Dialects
Eastern
Arabian Peninsular Dhofari · Hejazi · Najdi · Omani · Yemeni · Judeo-Yemeni
Bedouin / Bedawi Eastern Egyptian and Peninsular Bedawi ·
Others Central Asian (Khuzestani · Shirvani) · Egyptian (Sa'idi Arabic) · Gulf (Bahrani · Shihhi) · Levantine (Cypriot Maronite · Lebanese · Palestinian) · Iraqi (Judeo-Iraqi) · Sudanese
Maghrebi Algerian · Saharan · Shuwa · Hassānīya · Andalusian · Libyan Arabic (Judeo-Tripolitanian) · Siculo-Arabic (Maltese) · Moroccan Arabic (Judeo-Moroccan) · Tunisian Arabic (Judeo-Tunisian)
Others Ancient North Arabian (Safaitic · Dedanitic/Lihyanitic (Dedanite/Lihyanite) · Thamudic · Hasaitic · Hismaic · Taymanitic · Dumaitic
South
Western South
Old South Sabaean · Minaean · Qatabanian · Hadramautic
Ethiopian
North Ge'ez · Tigrinya · Tigre · Dahalik
South
Amharic Argobba
Harari Silt'e (Wolane, Ulbareg, Inneqor) · Zay
Outer
n-group Gafat · Soddo
tt-group Mesmes · Muher · West Gurage (Masqan · Ezha · Chaha · Gura · Gumer · Gyeto · Ennemor · Endegen)
Eastern South
Bathari · Harsusi · Hobyot · Jibbali · Mehri · Soqotri

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Dr Ziony Zevit istinguished Professor in Biblical Literature and Northwest Semitic Languages was appointed to two editorial boards of publications and is a member of five promotion review

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