Proto-Afroasiatic language

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Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Infobox proto-language Proto-Afroasiatic (PAA), also known as Proto-Hamito-Semitic, Proto-Semito-Hamitic, and Proto-Afrasian, is the reconstructed proto-language from which all modern Afroasiatic languages are descended. Though estimations vary widely, it is believed by scholars to have been spoken as a single language around 12,000 to 18,000 years ago (12 to 18 kya), that is, between 16,000 and 10,000 BC. Although no consensus exists as to the location of the Afroasiatic homeland, the putative homeland of Proto-Afroasiatic speakers, the majority of scholars agree that it was located within a region of West Asia or Northeast Africa.Template:Sfn

The reconstruction of Proto-Afroasiatic is problematic and has not progressed to the degree found in Indo-European linguistics.Template:Sfn The immense amount of time over which the branches have been separated, coupled with the wide gap between the attestations of the original branches (3rd millennium BC for Egyptian language in Northeast Africa and Semitic languages in Western Asia, through to as recent as 19th and 20th centuries AD for many Chadic, Cushitic, and Omotic languages) mean that determining sound correspondences has not yet been possible. In addition to more traditional proposed consonant correspondences, there is also a divergent proposal that has become popular among Egyptologists; there is no agreement about PAA's vowels, the existence of tone, or its syllable structure. At the same time, scholars disagree as to whether and to what extent the classical Semitic languages of Western Asia are a conservative, faithful representation of PAA morphology. This is particularly important for the question of whether the lexical roots in the language were originally mostly biradical or triradical, that is, whether they originally had two or three consonants. It also plays into the question of the degree to which Proto-Afroasiatic had root-and-pattern morphology, as most fully displayed in the Semitic, Egyptian, and to some degree Cushitic branches.

There are nonetheless some items of agreement and reconstructed vocabulary. Most scholars agree that Proto-Afroasiatic nouns had grammatical gender, at least two and possibly three grammatical numbers (singular, plural, and possibly dual), as well as a case system with at least two cases. Proto-Afroasiatic may have had marked nominative or ergative-absolutive alignment. A deverbal derivational prefix *mV- is also widely reconstructed. While there is disagreement about the forms of the PAA personal pronouns, there is agreement that there were independent and "bound" (unstressed, clitic) forms. There is also agreement that a widespread demonstrative pattern of n = masculine and plural, t= feminine goes back to PAA, as well as about the existence of an interrogative pronoun *mV, which may not have distinguished animacy. There is some agreement that the PAA verb had two or possibly three basic forms, though there is disagreement about what those forms were and what tenses, aspects, or moods they expressed. There is also widespread agreement that there were possibly two sets of conjugational affixes (prefixes and suffixes) used for different purposes. Additionally, the importance of verbal gemination and reduplication and the existence of three derivational affixes, especially of a causative -*s-, are commonly reconstructed. A numeral system cannot be reconstructed, although numerous PAA numerals and cognate sets from 1 to 9 have been proposed.

Dating

There is no consensus as to when Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken.Template:Sfn The absolute latest date for when Proto-Afroasiatic could have been extant is Template:Circa, after which Egyptian and the Semitic languages are firmly attested. However, in all likelihood these languages began to diverge well before this hard boundary.Template:Sfn The estimations offered by scholars as to when Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken vary widely, ranging from 18,000Template:NbspBC to 8,000Template:NbspBC.Template:Sfn An estimate at the youngest end of this range still makes Afroasiatic the oldest proven language family.Template:Sfn Contrasting proposals of an early emergence, Tom Güldemann has argued that less time may have been required for the divergence than is usually assumed, as it is possible for a language to rapidly restructure due to areal contact, with the evolution of Chadic (and likely also Omotic) serving as pertinent examples.Template:Sfn

Problems of reconstruction

At present, there is no commonly accepted reconstruction of Afroasiatic morphology, grammar, syntax, or phonology.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Because of the great amount of time since Afroasiatic split into branches, there are limits to what scholars can reconstruct.Template:Sfn Cognates tend to disappear from related languages over time.Template:Sfn There are currently not many widely accepted Afroasiatic cognates,Template:Sfn and it is difficult to derive sound correspondence rules from a small number of examples.Template:Sfn The most convincing cognates in Afroasiatic often have the same or very similar consonants but very different vowels, a fact which has not yet been explained.Template:Sfn Additionally, it is not always clear which words are cognates,Template:Sfn as some proposed cognates may be chance resemblances.Template:Sfn Moreover, at least some cognates are likely to have been altered irregularly due to analogical change, making them harder to recognize.Template:Sfn As words change meaning over time, the question of which words might have originally meant the same thing is often difficult to answer.Template:Sfn As a result, Robert Ratcliffe suggests that Proto-Afroasiatic may never be reconstructed in the same way that Proto-Indo-European has been.Template:Sfn

The current state of reconstruction is also hindered by the fact that the Egyptian and Semitic branches of Afroasiatic are attested as early as 3000 BC, while the languages of the Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, and Omotic branches are only attested much later, sometimes in the 20th century.Template:Sfn The long history of scholarship of the Semitic languages compared to other branches is another obstacle in reconstructing Proto-Afroasiatic; typical features of Semitic have often been projected back to the proto-language, despite their cross-linguistic rarity and lack of correspondences in other branches.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Like cognates, shared morphological features tend to disappear over time, as can be demonstrated within Afroasiatic by comparing Old Egyptian (2600–2000 BC) with Coptic (after 200 AD).Template:Sfn Yet it is also possible for forms closer to PAA to be preserved in languages recorded later, while languages recorded earlier may have forms that diverge more from PAA.Template:Sfn In order to provide a more accurate reconstruction of Afroasiatic, it will be necessary to first reconstruct the proto-forms of the individual branches,Template:Sfn a task which has proven difficult. As of 2023, there is only the beginning of a consensus on the reconstruction of Proto-Semitic, and no widely accepted reconstruction of any of the other branches' proto-forms.Template:Sfn Current attempts at reconstructing Afroasiatic often rely on comparing individual words or features in the daughter languages, which leads to results that are not convincing to many scholars.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Homeland

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Phonology

Consonants

There is currently no consensus on the consonant phonemes of Afroasiatic or on their correspondences in the individual daughter languages.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Most reconstructions agree that PAA had three series of obstruents (plosives, fricatives, and affricates) and that the continuants were all voiceless.Template:Sfn There is also general agreement that obstruents were organized in triads of voiceless, voiced, and "emphatic" (possibly glottalized) consonants, and that PAA included pharyngeal and laryngeal consonants.Template:Sfn Disagreement exists about whether there were labialized velar consonants.Template:Sfn

Several Afroasiatic languages have large consonant inventories, and it is likely that this is inherited from proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Vladimir Orel and Olga Stolbova (1995) reconstruct 32 consonant phonemes,Template:Sfn while Christopher Ehret reconstructs 42.Template:Sfn Of these, twelve in both reconstructions rely on the same sound correspondences, while an additional eighteen rely on more or less the same sound correspondences.Template:Sfn

Consonant phonemes reconstructed from compatible sets of sound correspondences in Ehret (1995) and Orel and Stolbova (1995), according to Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Template:Efn
labial alveolar/dental palatal velar pharyngeal glottal
central lateral plain labialized
stops p b t d k g kʼ [kʷ gʷ kʼʷ] ʔ
fricatives f s ɬ/tɬTemplate:Efn ħ ʕ h
affricates tʃʼ
nasals m n ŋ ŋʷ]
liquids w r l j

Both reconstructions also include a number of other consonants. While some of these are the same, they rely on correspondences in the daughter languages which cannot be reconciled.Template:Sfn For instance, although both Ehret and Orel and Stolbova reconstruct *tʼ, Ehret gives its Egyptian correspondence as s, while Orel and Stolbova give it as d and t; and though both reconstruct PAA *tlʼ, Ehret gives its Arabic correspondence as , while Orel and Stolbova give it as .Template:Sfn Additionally, Ehret has reconstructed 11 consonants not found in Orel and Stolbova, while Orel and Stolbova have reconstructed 2 not found in Ehret. The additional consonants are:Template:Sfn

  • Ehret: pʼ, ʃ, ts, z, dz, tʃ, dʒ, tʼ, sʼ, tlʼ, dɮ, ɣ⁽ʷ⁾, x⁽ʷ⁾
  • Orel and Stolbova: ts, dz, tsʼ, tʃ, dʒ, tʼ, ɬ, tɬʼ, ʁ, χ, q, qʼ

An earlier, larger reconstruction from 1992 by Orel, Stolbova and other collaborators from the Moscow School of Comparative Linguistics including Igor Diakonoff and Alexander Militarev includes also *pʼ, *tɬ, *ʃ, *kx⁽ʷ⁾, *gɣ⁽ʷ⁾, *kxʼ⁽ʷ⁾, *x⁽ʷ⁾.Template:Sfn

Taking Ehret's labialized velars as equivalent to Orel and Stolbova's non-labialized set, and taking Ehret's extra nasals as equivalent to Orel and Stolbova's <n>,Template:Sfn the two reconstructions mostly agree on the following correspondences between the different branches of Afroasiatic:

Consonant correspondences in Afroasiatic compatible between the reconstructions of Ehret (1995) and Orel and Stolbova (1995)
Proto-Afroasiatic Proto-Semitic Egyptian Proto-BerberTemplate:Efn Proto-Chadic Proto-Cushitic Proto-Omotic
Script error: No such module "Footnotes". Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
*b *b *b b *b *b *b *b
*p *p *p p *f *p *p *p
*f *f *p f *f *f *f E: *p
O/S: *p/*f
*d *d *d d *d *d *d *d
*t *t *t t *t *t *t *t
*g *g *g g
[O/S: also ṯ, ḏ]
*g *g *g *g
*k *k *k k
[O/S: also ṯ, ḏ]
*k *k *k *k
*k' *ḳ [kʼ] *k' q
[O/S: also ṯ, ḏ]
*k' *k' *k' *k'
*s *s *š [ʃ] s *s *s
(E: *s3)
*s
(O/E: also *š)
*s
(O/S: also *š)
*ĉ [tɬ] *ŝ [ɬ] š *c [ts] E: *ɬ
O/S: *ĉ [tɬ]
E: *ɬ
O/S: *s
E: *l
O/S: *š
*ʾ [ʔ]
(O/S: also *ʕ)
ꜣ [ʔ]
(O/S: also *l)

(E: also 0)

(E: also 0)
*ḥ [ħ] *ḥ [ħ] *ḥ [ħ] E: ḥ
O/S: h
*ḥ E: *h
O/S: *ḥ
*ḥ
(O/S: also h)
E: *h1, 0
O/S: *h
*ʿ [ʕ] *ʿ [ʕ] *ʔ, *h E: *ʔ, 0
O/S: *ʕ, *ʔ
E: *ʕ
O/S: *ʕ, *ʔ, *h

(E: also 0)
*h *h *h h *h *h *h *h (E: *h1)
*l *l *l E: n
O/S: j, n, r
*l *l *l *l
*r *r *r E: r
O/S: j, n, r
*r *r *r *r
*m *m *m m *m *m *m *m
*n *n *n n *n *n *n *n
*w *w *w w *w *w *w *w
*y [j] *y [j] *y j, y *y *y *y *y

Neuere Komparatistik

Additionally, there is another proposal for the sound correspondences between – and phonetic values of – Egyptian and Semitic consonants. This second theory is known as Script error: No such module "Lang". and was first proposed by Semiticist Otto Rössler on the basis of consonant incompatibilities.Template:Sfn In particular, Rössler argued that, since the hieroglyph conventionally transcribed as <ʿ> and described as never co-occurs with a dental consonant but does co-occur with other pharyngeal consonants, it must itself have originally been a dental *d in Proto-Afroasiatic, which later became *ʕ in Egyptian.Template:Sfn Rössler's ideas have come to dominate the field of Egyptology without, however, achieving general acceptance.Template:Sfn Orin Gensler argues that Rössler's sound change is typologically extremely unlikely, though still possible,Template:Sfn while many of the etymologies proposed in support of the theory have been attacked by Gábor Takács.Template:Sfn The most important sound correspondences in the Script error: No such module "Lang". that differ from the traditional understanding are:

Proposed radically different Egyptian-Semitic consonant correspondences by RösslerTemplate:Sfn
Egyptian j, r ʿ f z d
Semitic *ʔ, *d *g, *ɣ, *ʕ *d, *ḏ, *z, *ḏ̣ *b *z, *ḏ, *ṯ *ṣ, *ḏ̣ *ṯ̣, *ʕ, *ḳ

Vowels

Reconstructed PAA vocabulary items demonstrating different reconstructed vowels, according to Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
Item Diakonoff et al. 1987Template:Efn Orel and Stolbova 1995 Ehret 1995Template:Efn
'blood' *dṃ *dam- *dîm-/*dâm-
'build' *bVn *ben- *-bĭn-
'fly' *pi̭r *pir- *-pîr-
'hill/heap' *tṷl *tül- *-tŭul-

Attempts to reconstruct the vocalic system of Proto-Afroasiatic vary considerably.Template:Sfn While there is no consensus, many scholars prefer to reconstruct a simple three vowel system with long and short *a, *i, and *u.Template:Sfn Some of the difficulty in reconstruction is likely related to the use of vowel changes known as apophony (or "ablaut") in the "root-and-pattern" system found in various Afroasiatic languages.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In addition to apophony, some modern AA languages display vowel changes referred to as umlaut.Template:Sfn

Igor Diakonoff, Viktor Porkhomovksy and Olga Stolbova proposed in 1987 that Proto-Afroasiatic had a two vowel system of *a and , with the latter realized as [i] or [u] depending on its contact with labial or labialized consonants.Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret has proposed a five vowel system with long and short *a, *e, *o, *i, and *u, arguing that his reconstruction is supported by the Chadic and Cushitic vowels.Template:Sfn Vladimir Orel and Olga Stolbova instead proposed a six vowel system with *a, *e, *o, *i, ([Script error: No such module "IPA".]), and *u; they further argued that the central vowels *e and *o could not occur together in the same root.Template:Sfn Taking a different approach, Ronny Meyer and H. Ekkehard Wolff propose that Proto-Afroasiatic may have had no vowels as such, instead employing various syllabic consonants (*l, *m, *n, *r) and semivowels or semivowel-like consonants (*w, *y, *ʔ, *ḥ, *ʕ, *h, *ʔʷ, *ḥʷ, *ʕʷ, *hʷ) to form syllables; vowels would have later been inserted into these syllables ("vocalogenesis"), developing first into a two vowel system (*a and ), as supported by Berber and Chadic data, and then developing further vowels.Template:Sfn

Tones and accent

Some scholars postulate that Proto-Afroasiatic was a tonal language, with tonality subsequently lost in some branches. Igor Diakonoff argued for the existence of tone based on his reconstruction of many otherwise homophonous words.Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret instead takes the fact that three branches of AA have tone as his starting point; he has postulated a tonal system of at least two tonal phonemes, falling tone, rising tone, and possibly a third tone, level tone.Template:Sfn

Other scholars argue that Proto-AA had a pitch accent and some branches subsequently developed tone.Template:Sfn Such scholars postulate that tones developed to compensate for lost or reduced syllables, and note that certain tones are often associated with certain syllable-final consonants.Template:Sfn Zygmunt Frajzyngier and Erin Shay note that in AA tonal languages, tone usually has a grammatical rather than a lexical function, and argue that there is thus no basis to reconstruct it as a lexical feature in PAA, as Diakonoff does; they find Ehret's reasoning more sound.Template:Sfn

Syllable structure

Permitted Proto-Afroasiatic syllables according to Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
CV CV: CVC CVC-C CV:-C

Igor Diakonoff argues that Proto-Afroasiatic required a consonant at both the beginning of a syllable and the end of a word, and that only one consonant was possible at the beginning or end of a syllable.Template:Sfn Zygmont Frajzyngier and Erin Shay note that these rules appear to be based on Semitic structures, whereas Chadic includes syllables beginning with vowels as well as initial and final consonant clusters.Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret argues that all word stems in PAA took the shape CV (with a possible alternate form VC) and CVC, with suffixes often giving the syllabic shape CVCC.Template:Sfn

David Wilson agrees with Diakonoff that the root syllable could only begin with a single consonant, but adds a requirement that syllables have two mora weight and argues for the possibility of an extra-syllabic consonant at the end of a root (CVC-C or CV:C).Template:Sfn

Morphosyntax

Biradical and triradical roots

The degree to which the Proto-AA verbal root was originally triradical (having three consonants) or biradical (having two consonants) is debated.Template:Sfn Among the modern branches, most Semitic roots are triradical, whereas most Chadic, Omotic, and Cushitic roots are biradical.Template:Sfn The "traditional theory" argues for original triradicalism in the family, as is the case in Semitic.Template:Sfn In this theory, almost all biradical roots are the result of the loss of a third consonant.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As early as the Middle Ages, however, grammarians had noticed that some triradical roots in Arabic differed in only one consonant and had related meanings.Template:Sfn According to supporters of original triradicalism such as Gideon Goldenberg, these variations are common in language and inconclusive for the matter. He compares phonetic similarity between words with similar meanings in English such as glow, gleam, glitter, glaze, and glade.Template:Sfn

Other scholars argue that the PAA root may have originally been mostly biradical, to which a third radical was then added.Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret argues that the third consonants were derivational affixes, proposing as many as thirty-seven separate verbal extensions that subsequently became fossilized as third consonants.Template:Sfn This theory has been criticized by some, such as Andrzej Zaborski and Alan Kaye, as being too many extensions to be realistic, though Zygmont Frajzyngier and Erin Shay note that some Chadic languages have as many as twelve extensions.Template:Sfn An alternative model was proposed by Georges Bohas, who argued that the third consonants were added to differentiate roots of similar meaning but without the third consonant having a particular meaning itself.Template:Sfn Biradical verbs may also have been made triradical on the model of so-called "weak verbs," which have a final radical y or w.Template:Sfn

Many scholars do not argue for the original nature of either biradical or triradical roots, instead arguing that there are original triradical roots, original biradical roots, and triradical roots resulting from the addition of a consonant.Template:Sfn Not all triradical roots can be convincingly explained as coming from biradicals, and there are cases in which triradical roots with similar meanings appear to differ in one consonant due to root-internal changes or derivation via rhyme.Template:Sfn Andréas Stauder argues that the evidence from Ancient Egyptian shows that both tri- and biradical verbs were probably present in Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Igor Diakonoff, in contrast, argued that the PAA root was originally biradical but saw the biradical roots outside of Semitic as largely the result of losing a third consonant.Template:Sfn

Root-and-pattern-morphology

Afroasiatic languages feature a "root-and-pattern" (nonconcatenative) system of morphology, in which the root consists of consonants alone and vowels are inserted via apophony according to "templates" to create words.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A "template" consists of one or more vowels and sometimes a consonant; consonants included in the pattern often involve gemination.Template:Sfn

If root-and-pattern morphology originated in Proto-Afroasiatic, then an explanation must be found for why it has mostly disappeared in the Omotic and Chadic branches; if it was not present in PAA, then an explanation must be found for why it developed independently in the Semitic, Egyptian, and Cushitic branches.Template:Sfn

Case alignment

Hans-Jürgen Sasse proposed that Proto-Afroasiatic was a marked nominative language, in which the nominative case is only used to mark the subject of a verb, whereas an absolutive case is the citation form of the noun and also marks the object.Template:Sfn Evidence for marked nominative alignment comes primarily from the use of cases in Cushitic and the so-called "states" of the noun in Berber languages; additionally, Helmut Satzinger has argued that the forms of the pronouns in the other branches show evidence of marked nominative alignment.Template:Sfn

Igor Diakonoff instead argued that Proto-Afroasiatic was an ergative-absolutive language, in which the ergative case marks the subject of transitive verbs and the absolutive case marks both the object of transitive verbs and the subject of intransitive verbs.Template:Sfn Satzinger suggests that Proto-Afroasiatic may have developed from ergative-absolutive to a marked nominative language.Template:Sfn However, Abdelaziz Allati notes that, if PAA was originally ergative-aligned, it is unclear why both the attested ancient languages and modern AA languages predominantly have nominative-accusative alignment.Template:Sfn

Word order

Proto-Afroasiatic word order has not yet been established.Template:Sfn Igor Diakonoff proposed that PAA had verb-subject-object word order (VSO word order), meaning that the verb would come first in most sentences.Template:Sfn Carsten Peust likewise supports VSO word order, as this is found in the two oldest attested branches, Egyptian and Semitic.Template:Sfn However, Ronny Meyer and H. Ekkehard Wolff argue that this proposal does not concord with Diakonoff's suggestion that PAA was an ergative-absolutive language, in which subject and object are not valid categories.Template:Sfn Zygmont Frajzyngier and Erin Shay further note that, if Proto-Afroasiatic had VSO word order, then an explanation must be found for why two of its branches, Omotic and Cushitic, show subject–object–verb word order (SOV word order).Template:Sfn Both sets of scholars argue that this area needs more research.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Nouns and adjectives

Grammatical gender

A system of sex-based male and female grammatical gender is widely agreed to have been present in Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn However, Russell Schuh argues that there was no gender distinction in the plural, as this feature is found only in Semitic and Berber (see also personal pronouns).Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret argues against the consensus that grammatical gender existed in Proto-Afroasiatic, arguing that its development is an isogloss separating all other Afroasiatic languages from Omotic, which alone preserves the original, genderless grammar of the proto-language.Template:Sfn Other scholars such as Lionel Bender argue that Omotic has lost grammatical gender despite originally having had it.Template:Sfn

A feminine morpheme -Vt is found widely in Afroasiatic languages.Template:Sfn Lameen Souag argues that this feminine ending -t is probably a case of a grammaticalized demonstrative, as this feature has also independently developed in some Chadic and Cushitic languages.Template:Sfn Diakonoff argued that the original gender system of Afroasiatic had masculine endings *-y/*-w (later *-Vy/*-Vw) and feminine endings *-H/*-y (later *-āʔ/*-āy), the later of which was later ousted by feminine *-(a)t on nouns.Template:Sfn Marijn van Putten has reconstructed a feminine ending *-ay/*-āy from Semitic and Berber evidence: he argues that this ending comes down from the last common ancestor of Berber and Semitic, which may be Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Despite arguing that Proto-Afroasiatic had no grammatical gender, Ehret argues that there is evidence for natural gender in all branches, including Omotic, perhaps marked originally by an opposition of PAA *-u (masculine) and *-i (feminine), as also found in the second person singular pronouns.Template:Sfn

In addition to grammatical gender, Igor Diakonoff argues that Afroasiatic languages show traces of a nominal classification system, which was already unproductive in the Proto-Afroasiatic stage. In particular, he noted a suffix *-Vb- used to mark harmful animals.Template:Sfn Vladimir Orel also attests less well-defined uses for this suffix,Template:Sfn while Ehret takes this as a suffix to mark animals and parts of the body.Template:Sfn

Number

Afroasiatic languages today clearly distinguish singular and plural.Template:Sfn One of the first features of Proto-Afroasiatic proposed by Joseph Greenberg was the existence of "internal-a plurals" (a type of broken plural): a pluralizing morpheme in which a vowel *a was inserted between the two final consonants of the root, possibly replacing another vowel via apophony.Template:Sfn However, Paul Newman has argued that while plurals via vowel alteration are frequent in Chadic, they cannot be reconstructed back to Proto-Chadic or Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Andréas Stauder likewise argues that Coptic and Egyptian plurals via vowel change may have developed independently.Template:Sfn Lameen Souag argues that while some form of vowel-changing plural likely goes back to Proto-Afroasiatic, many of the templates found in the branches likely do not.Template:Sfn

Several Afroasiatic languages of the Semitic, Chadic, and Cushitic branches attest pluralization via reduplication, a feature which has often been assumed to go back to Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Robert Ratcliffe has instead argued that this reduplicating pattern originated after PAA, as a way to allow biradical nouns to insert "internal-a," a process which then became generalized to other roots in some languages; as an alternative hypothesis, they may have developed from forms with plural suffixes.Template:Sfn Afroasiatic languages also use several pluralizing affixes – few of these, however, are present in more than a few branches, making them difficult to reconstruct.Template:Sfn

In addition to a singular and plural, Egyptian and Semitic attest a dual, the endings of which can be reconstructed respectively as Template:Langx and Semitic Script error: No such module "Lang". (nominative) and Script error: No such module "Lang". (oblique).Template:Sfn These endings are very similar to each other,Template:Sfn and due to the dual's attestation in the two earliest attested branches of Afroasiatic it is also usually reconstructed for the proto-language.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The loss of the dual in the other branches over time is a well attested feature in languages, including within the Egyptian and Semitic branches themselves.Template:Sfn

Case system

Reconstructed Proto-Afroasiatic case endings
Case SingularTemplate:Sfn PluralTemplate:Sfn
Nominative *-u -*ū
Accusative / Absolutive *-a -*ī
Genitive *-i
Locative/terminative (disputed) *-is

There is widespread agreement that Proto-Afroasiatic had case inflection.Template:Sfn First proposed by Hans-Jürgen Sasse on the basis of his reconstruction of the Proto-Cushitic case system in 1984,Template:Sfn Proto-Afroasiatic is usually reconstructed with a case system similar to Proto-Semitic.Template:Sfn This gives a nominative ending*-u, accusative or absolutive *-a, and genitive *-i.Template:Sfn Besides Proto-Semitic, evidence for these endings is derived from the Cushitic languages and has been argued to exist in Berber as well. The Egyptian nominal ending -w, found on some masculine nouns, may also be evidence of this system.Template:Sfn Some evidence for nominative -u may also exist from the Omotic branch.Template:Sfn By the evidence of Semitic, in the dual and plural, only the nominative and an oblique were distinguished.Template:Sfn David Wilson, on the other hand, argues that the case endings are often not cognate in the individual branches of Afroasiatic and that this precludes their reconstruction for the proto-language.Template:Sfn

Old Akkadian and Palaeosyrian have two additional cases, a locative in Script error: No such module "Lang". and a terminative case in Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:Sfn Scholars debate whether these are vestigial cases or adverbial postpositions.Template:Sfn The ending Script error: No such module "Lang". has often been connected to the Egyptian postposition Script error: No such module "Lang". and is sometimes used to reconstruct a Proto-Afroasiatic locative case.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Diakonoff also believed he could reconstruct a comitative-dative case in *-dV or *-Vd, an ablative-comparative case in *-kV, a "directive" case in *-l, and an ablative case in *-p.Template:Sfn

Derived nouns and adjectives

*mV-prefix

A prefix mV- is the most widely attested affix in AA that is used to derive nouns.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn For PAA, its shape has variously been reconstructed as *ma-, *ma(i)-, *mV-, and *-m-.Template:Sfn In the daughter languages, it is attested with a wide variety of meanings and functions, such as forming deverbal agent nouns, place nouns, instrument nouns, as well as participles.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Erin Shay argues that *mV- is the only prefix in the AA phylum that clearly goes back to the proto-language rather than possibly being an areal feature.Template:Sfn

The precise meaning and origin of this prefix in PAA are debated. There is a long tradition of comparing the prefix to the interrogative pronoun *mā 'who'.Template:Sfn Carsten Peust has suggested a common PAA origin for the prefix in forming nouns of place and instrument, but proposes that the *mV- prefix used in agent nouns and participles is actually a post-PAA development, derived from the interrogative pronoun *mā 'who'.Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret, meanwhile, proposes that the prefix did not exist in PAA at all, but is a later development from the interrogative pronoun.Template:Sfn Gábor Takács and Andrzej Zaborski both reject a connection to *mā entirely; Takács instead suggests that a connection to the Egyptian preposition Script error: No such module "Lang". needs further consideration, while Zaborski argues for a connection to a verb *VmV- 'to be'.Template:Sfn

"Nisba"

The term "nisba" refers to a suffix found in the Semitic (Script error: No such module "Lang".) and Egyptian (Script error: No such module "Lang".) branches, with possible relict traces in Berber.Template:Sfn A related suffix Script error: No such module "Lang". occurs in Arabic and possibly Egyptian, as suggested by e.g. Script error: No such module "Lang". 'craftsman', from Script error: No such module "Lang". 'craft'.Template:Sfn Carsten Peust argues that this suffix descends from Proto-Afroasiatic, as it is found in the two oldest attested branches of the family.Template:Sfn In the Semitic languages, the "nisba" is used to form adjectives, derive nouns for people associated with a place or profession, and to form hypercoristic names.Template:Sfn In Egyptian, it forms adjectives and nouns from nouns and prepositions.Template:Sfn

The "nisba" is often assumed to be connected to the genitive case ending in Semitic and possibly Cushitic.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Igor Diakonoff argued that the "nisba" was an "expanded" form of the genitive suffix: he reconstructs the "nisba" suffix as *-iya or -*ī; he also suggests the existence of a variant *-uwa.Template:Sfn Lipiński suggests that the "nisba" originated as a postposition, which was also used to create the genitive case.Template:Sfn Christopher Ehret argues that the original form of the suffix was -*iy and also reconstructs a form-*ay.Template:Sfn This latter form is attested among the Semitic languages and may have been dialectal in origin.Template:Sfn

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

The forms of the personal pronouns are very stable throughout Afroasiatic (excluding Omotic),Template:Sfn but there is no consensus on what the reconstructed set of Afroasiatic pronouns might have looked like.Template:Sfn Most modern branches have an independent / absolute pronoun, an object pronoun, and a suffix /possessive pronoun.Template:Sfn According to Igor Diakonoff, the suffix/possessive pronoun was originally used as the object of verbs and to show a possessive relationship, the "independent" pronoun served to show emphasis, and the "object" pronoun was used to mark the subject of intransitive verbs and the direct object of transitive verbs.Template:Sfn

All Afroasiatic branches differentiate between masculine and feminine third person singular pronouns, and all except for Cushitic and Omotic also differentiate between second person singular masculine and feminine pronouns.Template:Sfn Semitic and Berber also differentiate between masculine and feminine second and third person plural, but there is no evidence for this in Ancient Egyptian, Cushitic, or Chadic, perhaps indicating that there was no gender distinction in the plural in Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Chadic has both an inclusive and exclusive form of "we", which Igor Diakonoff and Václav Blažek reconstruct also for Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Helmut Satzinger has argued that Proto-Afroasiatic only distinguished between the "object" and "possessive" pronouns, deriving the independent pronouns via various processes in the branches.Template:Sfn He argues that the independent pronouns derive from various strategies combining pronominal elements with different nominal or pronominal bases.Template:Sfn Václav Blažek reconstructs an original set of independent pronouns but argues that the ones found in most current Afroasiatic languages arose by a process of suppletion similar to that argued by Satzinger.Template:Sfn An example of one such process is the use of the prefix *ʔan-/*ʔin-, which appears in the Semitic and Old Egyptian first person independent pronouns, the Old Egyptian, Cushitic, and Semitic second person singular and plural pronouns, and the Old Egyptian and Berber third person singular and plural independent pronouns.Template:Sfn While Ehret reconstructs this as the original form of the first person singular pronoun,Template:Sfn other scholars argue that this element either represents a form of the copula 'to be' or a particle meaning 'self'.Template:Sfn

Proto-Afroasiatic personal pronouns according to Script error: No such module "Footnotes". and Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
Number Scholar Singular, bound Singular, independent Plural, bound Plural, independentTemplate:Efn
1 Ehret *i, *yi *(ʔ)ân-/(ʔ)în- *(ʔ)ǎnn-/(ʔ)ǐnn-
Blažek *ʔya/*ʔyi/*ʔyu *ʔaku *muni (inclusive), *na/*ni/*nu (exclusive) *muni (inclusive), *ḥina/u (exclusive)
2 m. Ehret *ku, *ka *(ʔ)ânt/(ʔ)înt- *kuuna
Blažek *ku *ta *kunwa *tunwa
2 f. Ehret *ki *(ʔ)ânt/(ʔ)înt- *kuuna
Blažek *ti *kinya *tunya
3 EhretTemplate:Efn *si, *isi *su, *usu
Blažek (m) *šu *šuwa *šunwa
Blažek (f) *ši *šiya *šinya

Determiners

Afroasiatic languages attest a variety of determiners, only some of which are likely to derive from Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn As first noticed by Joseph Greenberg, Afroasiatic languages in all branches but Omotic attest a series of third person agreement markers in the form n- (masculine), t- (feminine), and n- (plural), which probably derive from Proto-Afroasiatic determiners; Omotic attests t- (feminine) alone of this set.Template:Sfn Additionally, Omotic attests a masculine agreement form k-, while Chadic and Cushitic show a gender- and number-neutral form k-: both likely go back to a Proto-Afroasiatic determiner *k-,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn reconstructed by Ehret as *kaa 'this'.Template:Sfn Diakonoff argues that in Proto-Afroasiatic these forms were originally demonstrative pronouns that later developed into third person personal pronouns in some branches and into genitive markers in others.Template:Sfn Ehret also reconstructs a demonstrative *h- ('this/that') or *ha- ('this/that one').Template:Sfn

Interrogatives

The most common Afroasiatic interrogative pronoun is *mV,Template:Sfn which Ehret reconstructs as *ma, *mi 'what?'.Template:Sfn Diakonoff argued that *mV ultimately derived from a demonstrative stem *m-.Template:Sfn Only the Semitic reflexes of this root have separate forms for animate ('"who?") and inanimate ("what?") referents.Template:Sfn The Old Egyptian and Berber descendants both appear to be used regardless of whether the referent is a person or thing.Template:Sfn It is therefore not clear if this pronoun differentiated animacy in Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Lack of differentiation between "who?" and "what?" is also sporadically attested in Semitic and Cushitic, but appears to be absent in Chadic; most modern AA languages use different lexical roots to make the distinction.Template:Sfn

Ehret also reconstructs a second interrogative *wa-/*wi- 'what?'.Template:Sfn The PAA origin of this form is also accepted by Takács, but he reconstructs it as *ʔaw/*wa 'who?'.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Diakonoff also reconstructs an interrogative adjective, *ayyV-, which he claims left traces in Semitic, Cushitic, and Omotic.Template:Sfn Lipiński, on the other hand, holds this term to be Semitic and deriving from a particle Script error: No such module "Lang". 'where?'.Template:Sfn Takács derives this particle from PAA *ʔay/*ya, a variant of *ʔaw/*wa 'who?'.Template:Sfn

Verbs

Most morphological reconstruction for PAA has focused on the verb,Template:Sfn with categories found in Semitic languages such as aspect, voice, and person.Template:Sfn

Tenses, aspects, and moods (TAMs)

There is little agreement about which tenses, aspects, or moods (TAMs) Proto-Afroasiatic might have had: it may have had two basic forms (indicative vs. subjunctive, state vs. action, transitive vs. intransitive, or perfective vs. imperfective) or three (unmarked vs. perfective vs. imperfective).Template:Sfn There is also debate about whether some of the forms may have been nominal (using verbal nouns), or possibly participial or gerundival, rather than purely verbal.Template:Sfn TAMs may have been indicated by both changes in the verb stem and the use of suffixes and prefixes.Template:Sfn Some scholars argue that prefixes were used for "eventive" (describing things happening) aspects, as opposed to the "suffix conjugation," which described states.Template:Sfn Abdelaziz Allati, however, argues that this is a later development, which he associates primarily with Semitic.Template:Sfn

"Prefix conjugation"

Proposed PAA prefix conjugation, by Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Template:Efn
Person Singular Plural
1st *ʔV- *nV-
2nd *tV-
3rd M *yV- *yV-
F *tV-

Helmut Satzinger has argued that the earliest form of conjugation in Afroasiatic was the so-called "prefix conjugation," a form found in Semitic, Berber, and Cushitic that uses prefixes to conjugate verbs for person, gender, and number.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Other scholars ague that, as there is no evidence for the "prefix conjugation" in Omotic, Chadic, or Egyptian, the prefix conjugation may be a shared innovation in Semitic, Berber, and Cushitic.Template:Sfn In those languages where it appears, the "prefix conjugation" is used with two stems, with Igor Diakonoff identifying one as perfective/punctual as well as jussive, and the other with the imperfective.Template:Sfn These stems may also be known as "short form" (=perfective) and "long form" (=imperfective).Template:Sfn

Assuming a PAA origin, the prefixes can be reconstructed as agreeing with the forms of the "bound" personal pronouns in having *n- for first person plural, *t- for second person plural and singular and feminine third person singular, and *y/*i- for third person masculine and third person plural; the form of the first person singular is unclear, but may be *ʔ-.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The prefixes may have originally developed from the pronouns or from auxiliary verbs with pronominal elements, though N. J. C. Kouwenberg argues that the close agreement between the forms in Semitic, Berber, and Cushitic indicates that such grammaticalization must have happened in Proto-Afroasiatic itself or earlier.Template:Sfn

Short stem (perfective)

Joseph Greenberg proposed that the perfective ("past") stem of PAA had the form *yV-qtVl, based on Semitic, Berber, and Cushitic data.Template:Sfn There are a number of different "short" stems attested in Afroasiatic: in Semitic there are aorist, relative, and ventive forms.Template:Sfn In those branches with an apophonic imperfective, the perfective stem often has a vowel u.Template:Sfn Semitic, however, also attest a perfective form with -a- (yV-CCaC), used with intransitive verbs. Kossmann and Suchard argue for its connection to a similar form in Berber, an aspectual stative form with the same vocalization.Template:Sfn Kouwenberg argues for the PAA origin of the u- perfective given the parallels between Semitic, Cushitic, and Berber;Template:Sfn he suggests that it may have originally been a resultative form that turned into a perfective.Template:Sfn

Imperfective and long stem

Semitic, Berber, and possibly Cushitic all include an imperfective verb stem that includes an apophonic vowel a and gemination of the second consonant (*yV-qattVl). Greenberg argued that this form represented the original stem of imperfective ("present") in Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Maarten Kossmann and Benjamin D. Suchard have reconstructed this verb form as having the role of the imperfective in their hypothetical Proto-Berbero-Semitic while remaining agnostic on its PAA origins.Template:Sfn Ancient Egyptian also attests a geminated stem apparently used to mark incomplete action, though it was apparently formally different from that found in other branches.Template:Sfn Other scholars such as N. J. C. Kouwenberg and Frithiof Rundgren have argued that the *yV-qattVl form was originally a pluractional verb form that has come to replace an original PAA imperfective form.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rainer Voigt accepts that the *yV-qattVl stem is an original form of the imperfective, but argues that it was only used with certain classes of verbs. According to Voigt, the important feature of the imperfective was a-apophony.Template:Sfn

Central Semitic languages attest an imperfective form *yi-qVtlu-, which Rundgren argued was the original Semitic imperfective form.Template:Sfn Kouwenberg argues that this form has parallels in Semitic, Chadic, and Berber, and thus likely represents the PAA imperfective.Template:Sfn

Stative ("suffix") conjugation

Proposed PAA suffix conjugation, reconstructed by Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Template:Efn
Person Singular Plural
1st *-(ā)ku *-(ā)nV
2nd *-(ā)tV *-(ā)tVn
3rd M *-0
F *-0/-t

A second type of conjugation is represented by the "suffix conjugation", used to conjugate an originally stative form of the verb, which has close matches in Egyptian and Semitic, and parallels in Berber and Cushitic.Template:Sfn It is commonly reconstructed as part of the verbal system of PAA.Template:Sfn Like the prefix conjugation, the endings show some similarities to the pronominal system, although they are not as clear:Template:Sfn they appear related to the endings added to the base ʔan- in Egyptian.Template:Sfn N. J. C. Kouwenberg argues that the stative likely began as a conjugation for predicate adjectives in PAA, though little else can be said about the development of the form.Template:Sfn It may have originally been a nominalized verb form.Template:Sfn

Some scholars have questioned the common origin of the stative: Elsa Oréal argues the Egyptian and Semitic forms followed a common grammaticalization process rather than originating in PAA.Template:Sfn Maarten Kossmann and Benjamin D. Suchard similarly argue that the vowel patterns of the Semitic and Berber forms cannot be reconciled for their hypothetical "Proto-Berbero-Semitic," indicating that they are not directly cognate.Template:Sfn John Huehnergard, however, argues that the close match between e.g. Proto-Semitic Script error: No such module "Lang". 'you are/were heard' and Egyptian Script error: No such module "Lang". 'you are/were heard' makes a common origin more likely.Template:Sfn Andréas Stauder proposes a vocalization of the Proto-Egyptian form as Script error: No such module "Lang"., which he argues matches the Semitic form well.Template:Sfn The relationship of the Berber and Semitic form remains unclear,Template:Sfn with most scholars holding them not to be cognate.Template:Sfn

Egyptologists Frank Kammerzell and Wolfgang Schenkel have argued, on the basis of the spelling of the stative form in Old Egyptian, that the Egyptian stative actually shows two conjugations, one perfective and one stative in meaning.Template:Sfn Rainer Voigt has taken this as an Afroasiatic feature which also explains the development of the West Semitic perfective.Template:Sfn This theory has been rejected or questioned by Andréas Stauder, Kouwenberg, and Chris Reintges.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Derived verbs

Reduplicated and geminated verbs

The use of a vowel a to mark pluractionality is widespread in Afroasiatic, often accompanied by consonant reduplication or gemination.Template:Sfn Reduplication and gemination also frequently encode causative, intensive, iterative, and habitual aspect.Template:Sfn The use of full or partial reduplication may derive from contact with other African languages rather than from Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn Carsten Peust, on the other hand, argues that the presence of such verbs in Egyptian, the oldest attested language, and in Chadic and Semitic makes them a good candidate for reconstruction in Proto-Afroasiatic.Template:Sfn It is likewise reconstructed for PAA by Christopher Ehret and Vladimir Orel.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Verbal extensions

Three derivational affixes ("verbal extensions") can be reconstructed for Proto-Afroasiatic, which show the following range of meanings in the branches:Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In the modern languages, the meanings of the *-n-/*-m- and *-t- morpheme often overlap, though presumably they were distinct in PAA.Template:Sfn The presence of all three of these morphemes across a broad range of Afroasiatic families indicates that they originate in the proto-language rather than via chance resemblance or borrowing.Template:Sfn However, the relationship of the Egyptian n- and particularly -t affixes to those found in other branches has been criticized as weak or rejected by some scholars.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The *s- and *n-/*m- affixes have been explained as originating in pronominal/deictic expresses or auxiliary verbs which became grammaticalized, a proposal which Andréas Stauder also extends to *-t-.Template:Sfn In Semitic and Berber, all three morphemes appear as prefixes (with -t- originally an infix in Semitic).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In Omotic, -s and -t consistently appear as suffixes rather than prefixes, while in Cushitic, the placement of the affixes varies in the prefix and suffix conjugations.Template:Sfn In Egyptian, s- and n- appear as prefixes while -t appears as a suffix.Template:Sfn

Additional verbal extensions, with a wide range of meanings, have been reconstructed by Ehret and Vladimir Orel.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Numerals

Unlike in the Indo-European or Austronesian language families, numerals in AA languages cannot be traced to a proto-system.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Cushitic and Chadic numeral systems appear to have originally been base 5. The system in Berber, Egyptian, and Semitic, however, has independent words for the numbers 6–9.Template:Sfn Igor Diakonoff has suggested that many of the Afroasiatic languages' numerals derive transparently from counting on fingers (e.g., Cushitic/Omotic *lam 'two' = 'index finger'; Semitic *ḫams- 'five' = 'handful').Template:Sfn

In some instances, the same numeral has more than one root within a single branch. Within the Semitic language family alone, Edward Lipiński counts four different roots meaning "one".Template:Sfn Aren Wilson-Wright suggests that the root for 'one' has been replaced at least three times throughout the history of Afroasiatic and points to parallels in the Indo-European Greek and Tocharian languages.Template:Sfn The Semitic, Chadic, and Berber branches likewise show evidence for different branch-internal roots for two;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Template:Harvcoltxt argue that such differences could arise from different words for ordinal and cardinal numbers or from the use of different words for counting and adjectival forms of numbers.Template:Sfn

An additional difficulty in comparing numeral sets is that they often have irregular sound correspondences, as can be seen in Indo-European by comparing Latin Script error: No such module "Lang". Script error: No such module "Lang". to the Greek cognates Script error: No such module "Lang". Script error: No such module "Lang". (both 'four' 'five').Template:Sfn

  • 'one' has at least three proposed cognate sets:
  • PAA *whd (Wolfgang Schenkel):Template:Sfn Egyptian Script error: No such module "Lang"., Arabic (Semitic) Script error: No such module "Lang"., Proto-Berber *Script error: No such module "Lang".. This is a traditional proposed etymology.Template:Sfn This set is rejected by Takács,Template:Sfn but Lipiński does support the connection between Berber and Egyptian.Template:Sfn Carsten Peust supports the Egypto-Semitic connection but notes that it relies on "Rösslerian correspondences".Template:Sfn
  • Proto-Semitic Script error: No such module "Lang"., Central Atlas Tamazight and Zenati (Berber) Script error: No such module "Lang". (fem. Script error: No such module "Lang".),Template:Sfn Ometo (Omotic) Script error: No such module "Lang"., as well as Egyptian Script error: No such module "Lang". 'each, everyone'.Template:Sfn Aren Wilson-Wright finds the Egyptian match the best despite some semantic and phonological difficulties, but notes the difficulty in reconstructing the Berber and Omotic roots in their respective proto-languages.Template:Sfn
  • PAA *tk (Hans Mukarovsky):Template:Sfn Proto-Chadic *Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfn Oromo (Eastern Cushitic) Script error: No such module "Lang"., Kafa (North Omotic) Script error: No such module "Lang". 'to be united, together'. Carsten Peust notes that this root is somewhat dubious because several unrelated languages around the world have similar words for 'one'.Template:Sfn

The following cognates are discussed for the numerals 2–4:

  • PAA *tsan-/*can (Ehret),Template:Sfn *čn (Takács):Template:Sfn * Egyptian Script error: No such module "Lang"., Semitic Script error: No such module "Lang"., Berber *Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfn
  • PAA *tsîr(n)-/*cîr(n) (Ehret),Template:Sfn *čr (Takács):Template:Sfn *Semitic Script error: No such module "Lang"., Proto-Chadic *Script error: No such module "Lang".. Takács and Václav Blažek both suggest that this form may be a variant of the first root for 'two'.Template:Sfn Takács notes that only one branch, Semitic has both forms.Template:Sfn
  • PAA *ɬâm- (Ehret):Template:Sfn Cushitic *Script error: No such module "Lang"., Omotic *Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
  • 'three', PAA *xaynz- (Ehret):Template:Sfn Egyptian Script error: No such module "Lang"., North Omotic *Script error: No such module "Lang"., Chadic Script error: No such module "Lang".;Template:Sfn however the reconstructed Chadic form is uncertain and the sound correspondences problematic.Template:Sfn
  • 'four', PAA *fâzw- (Ehret),Template:Sfn *fṭ (Takács),Template:Sfn *fVdS/*-fVrSTemplate:Efn (Diakonoff):Template:Sfn Egyptian Script error: No such module "Lang"., Beja (Cushitic) Script error: No such module "Lang"., North Omotic *Script error: No such module "Lang".; some scholars also connect West Chadic *Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:Sfn
  • 'five': Semitic *Script error: No such module "Lang"., Berber *Script error: No such module "Lang"., with the Berber form having changed its initial sound to /s/ to alliterate with the word for 'six'Template:Sfn Alternatively, the Berber form may be borrowed from Semitic.Template:Sfn

The following cognate sets from 6–8 are also commonly accepted,Template:Sfn although each contains inconsistent sound correspondences:Template:Sfn

Lastly:

  • 'nine' also has a traditional proposed cognate set:Template:Sfn Egyptian Template:Transliteration, Semitic Script error: No such module "Lang"., Berber Script error: No such module "Lang".. However, Lipiński rejects the equivalency of the Egyptian and Semitic roots but accepts the link between Semitic and Berber,Template:Sfn while Takács accepts that the Egyptian and Semitic roots are probably related (with a case of dissimilation of /t/ to /p/ in Egyptian), but views the connection to Berber as doubtful.Template:Sfn

See also

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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Bibliography

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Template:RefendTemplate:Afroasiatic languagesTemplate:Authority control