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  1. South Arabian The South Arabian alphabet is thought to have developed from the Proto-Sinaitic alphabet in about the 9th century BC. It is known from inscriptions found in Eritrea, Babylonia and Yemen dating from between 9th century BC and 7th century AD, and was used to write Sabaean, Qatabanian, Hadramautic, Minaean, Himyarite and proto-Ge'ez, extinct Semitic languages once spoken in southern ...

  2. The Ancient South Arabian script (Old South Arabian: 𐩣𐩯𐩬𐩵 ms3nd; modern Arabic: الْمُسْنَد musnad) branched from the Proto-Sinaitic script in about the late 2nd millennium BCE. It was used for writing the Old South Arabian languages Sabaic, Qatabanic, Hadramautic, Minaean, and Hasaitic, and the ancient language of Eritrea ...

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  4. Old South Arabian [1] [2] [3] (also known as Ancient South Arabian (ASA), Epigraphic South Arabian, Ṣayhadic, or Yemenite) is a group of four closely related extinct languages ( Sabaean/Sabaic, Qatabanic, Hadramitic, Minaic) spoken in the far southern portion of the Arabian Peninsula. The earliest preserved records belonging to the group are ...

  5. Dec 7, 2018 · In this sense South Arabian is not unlike the Latin alphabet, used to write English, German, and the myriad of Romance languages. Each of these languages are within the Semitic branch of languages and are related to Aramaic and Hebrew. Yet while the genealogy of these languages is understood, the origins of the South Arabian script are still ...

  6. The Old South Arabian script developed as a distinct southern branch of the alphabet and spread to Eastern Africa, where Ethiopian scripts still u Fifty years passed before Russian scholar A.G. Lundin recognized the Beth Shemesh text for what it was: an abecedary (a text giving the alphabet in order for teaching or study), with a twist.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SabaicSabaic - Wikipedia

    Script. Sabaic was written in the South Arabian alphabet, and like Hebrew and Arabic marked only consonants, the only indication of vowels being with matres lectionis.For many years the only texts discovered were inscriptions in the formal Masnad script (Sabaic ms 3 nd), but in 1973 documents in another minuscule and cursive script were discovered, dating back to the second half of the 1st ...

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