Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> language Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> is the reconstructed ancestor of all <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> languages, old as well as modern...
<span class="searchmatch">Proto</span> afroasiatic is the reconstructed ancestor of Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, Egyptian, <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span>, and Omotic languages. It is accepted that <span class="searchmatch">proto</span>-Afroasiatic...
Kogan (2005), <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> Etymological Dictionary, volume II: Animal Names, Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, →ISBN Leonid Kogan (2011), “<span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> Lexicon”, in...
language at all ("reconstructed languages"), such as <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Germanic, <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Indo-European, and <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span>. Like "intermediary" reconstructions, reconstructed...
iltum, šamû, etc. Etymology: Etymological details, if known. If a <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> entry exists, we give a link to it first, with its translation in |t=...
context-based, depending on position in the word, whether the word is of <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> origin, and in the case of יִ and וּ, whether it follows another י or a...
in Proto-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> by reason of not being read into the obscurely spread treatises <span class="searchmatch">about</span> <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> morphology nor some necessary <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> languages...
script nor transliteration. Amongst <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> languages, Akkadian is the most ancient and I would opt for it to remain. <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>... are reconstructions by contemporary...
a borrowing from <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> *šūšān-. So I’m not sure what to make of this. Would the similarity of ϣⲱϣⲉⲛ (šōšen) to the <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> words just be a coincidence...
knew a lot <span class="searchmatch">about</span> <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> and could unify our <span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> etymologies. I was pretty shocked when I noticed we don't have a CAT:<span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Semitic</span> roots. —Mahāgaja...