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  1. Proto-Semitic is the reconstructed proto-language common ancestor to the Semitic language family. There is no consensus regarding the location of the Proto-Semitic Urheimat: scholars hypothesize that it may have originated in the Levant, the Sahara, the Horn of Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, or northern Africa. [1]

  2. Jul 1, 2017 · 4691. For over five thousand years people we now refer to historically as Semites moved across the ancient Near East. Their legacy is still unfolding today. The term “Semitic” was coined in 1781 by the German Historian Ludwig Schlözer to refer to languages spoken by a group of people thought to descend from the biblical figure Shem, son of ...

  3. Proto-Semitic *ś was still pronounced as in Biblical Hebrew, but no letter was available in the Early Linear Script, so the letter ש did double duty, representing both /ʃ/ and /ɬ/. Later on, however, /ɬ/ merged with /s/ , but the old spelling was largely retained, and the two pronunciations of ש were distinguished graphically in Tiberian ...

  4. Apr 10, 2024 · Personal names from this early period, preserved in cuneiform records, provide an indirect picture of the western Semitic language Amorite.Although the Proto-Byblian and Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions still await a satisfactory decipherment, they too suggest the presence of Semitic languages in early 2nd-millennium Syro-Palestine.

  5. The Proto-Semitic language was originally written with pictographs (picture writings), such as in the letter/pictograph , a picture of the hand. The Semitic word for a "hand" is yad and is the name of this letter, which represents the phonetic sound "Y." Each letter/pictograph in the Hebrew alphabet represents an idea.

  6. Semitic people or Semites is an obsolete term for an ethnic, cultural or racial group [2] [3] [4] [5] associated with people of the Middle East, including Arabs, Jews, Akkadians, and Phoenicians. The terminology is now largely unused outside the grouping "Semitic languages" in linguistics.

  7. , Proto-Chadic or Proto-Semitic), or a hypothetical common sound of origin. Languages are said to be genetically related when they meet two criteria: they match in phonology, vocabulary, and grammar in such a way that they can be systematically related to a common protolanguage, and the matches can… Read More.

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