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  1. Afro-Asiatic languages - Verbal System, Semitic, Berber: There are competing schools of thought surrounding the conjugational patterns of the protolanguage’s verbal system. For decades heated debates have focused on the functions and interrelations of the most basic inflectional categories, often discussed in terms of dichotomous subsystems such as “state versus action,” “transitive ...

  2. When East, South and Central Cushitic are all spoken in East Africa, and other Afro-Asiatic language families are also in East Africa/Nile Valley, like Omotic, Beja and Ancient Egyptian, the fact that Cushitic is also spoken in neighboring South Arabia does not "speak for a Middle Eastern origin,". 83.84.100.133 ( talk)

  3. The Modern South Arabian languages ( MSALs ), [1] [2] also known as Eastern South Semitic languages, are a group of endangered languages spoken by small populations inhabiting the Arabian Peninsula, in Yemen and Oman, and Socotra Island. Together with the Ethiosemitic and Sayhadic languages, the Western branch, they form the South Semitic sub ...

  4. Irish Wikipedia. The Irish Wikipedia ( Irish: Vicipéid na Gaeilge ), also known as An Vicipéid, is the Irish-language version of Wikipedia, run by the Wikimedia Foundation and established in October 2003, with the first article being written in January 2004. The founder of Vicipéid was Gabriel Beecham. [2]

  5. Sep 6, 1999 · The name Hamito-Semitic was applied to describe the two main phyla (Hamitic and Semitic) that philologists of African languages connected in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Hamitic branch included Ancient Egyptian (an extinct language known as Coptic in its final stages), Berber, and Cushitic, while the Semitic branch ...

  6. It includes such languages as Arabic, Hebrew, Amharic, and Hausa. The total number of speakers is estimated to be more than 250 million. The major branches of Afro-Asiatic are Semitic, Berber, Egyptian, Cushitic, Omotic, and Chadic. Berber languages are spoken by perhaps 15 million people in enclaves scattered across North Africa from Morocco ...

  7. Karo [2] (also Cherre, Kere, Kerre, Kara) is a South Omotic [3] language spoken in the Debub (South) Omo Zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region in Ethiopia. Karo is described as being closely related to its neighbor, Hamer-Banna, with a lexical similarity of 81%, [1] and is considered a dialect of Hamer by Blench (2006 ...

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