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East Semitic languages: Encyclopedia BETA


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East Semitic languages

Language family
name=East Semiticregion=formerly Mesopotamiafamilycolor=Afro-Asiaticfam2=Semiticchild1=Akkadianchild2=Eblaite}}

The East Semitic languages are one of the two major subdivisions of Semitic languages, the other being West Semitic. The East Semitic group is attested by two distinct languages, Akkadian and Eblaite, both are extinct. The East Semitic languages stand apart from other Semitic languages in a number of respects. Historically, it is believed that this linguistic situation came about as speakers of East Semitic languages wandered further east. Their entrance into Mesopotamia during the third millennium BCE is one of the earliest written historical record. By the beginning of the second millennium BCE, East Semitic languages, in particular Akkadian, had come to dominate the region. They were influenced by the non-Semitic Sumerian language and adopted cuneiform writing.

Modern understanding of the phonology of East Semitic languages can only be derived from careful study of written texts and comparison with the reconstructed Proto-Semitic. Most striking is the loss of the glottal stop, or aleph, and the voiced pharyngeal fricative, or ayin, both of which are prominent features of West Semitic languages (for example, Akk. bÄ"l 'master' < PS. *ba‘al). Also, East Semitic languages do not possess a series of three back fricatives: . Their ellision appears to give rise to the presence of an e vowel, where it is not found in other Semitic languages (for example, Akk. ekallu 'palace/temple' < PS. *haykal). It also appears that the series of interdental fricatives became sibilants (for example, Akk. Å¡alÅ¡u 'three' < PS. *). However, the exact phonological make-up of the languages is inexact, and the absence of features may have been the result of the inadequacies of Sumerian orthography to describe the sounds of Semitic languages rather than their real absence.

The word order in East Semitic may also have been influenced by Sumerian, being Subject Object Verb rather than the West Semitic Verb Subject Object order.



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