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Recent Articles
- “A Three-Day Journey”: The Syntax of Volition and Deixis in Exodus According to Targum Onkelos
- Disaster That Flies Down: A Hebrew Lesson on Isaiah 8:22
- Purified and Presented: A Hebrew Lesson on Numbers 8:21
- Like the Nations Before You: A Hebrew Walkthrough of Deuteronomy 8:20
- Voices of the Dead or the Living God? A Hebrew Lesson on Isaiah 8:19
- When the Ground Denies Him: A Hebrew Walkthrough of Job 8:18
- From Dust to Gnats: A Hebrew Lesson in Action
- The Power of Repetition: Exploring the Waw-Consecutive
- Through the Great and Fearsome Wilderness: From Fiery Serpent to Flowing Spring
- “Counsel Is Mine” — Exploring the Voice of Wisdom in Proverbs 8:14
- From the Garden to the Ear: Participles and Imperatives in Song of Songs 8:13
- Wisdom’s Self-Introduction: Where Insight Meets Strategy
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1. The Semitic Languages in General
The Semitic languages form a vast, historically influential linguistic family originating in Western Asia, encompassing Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic, and the extinct tongues of Assyria, Phoenicia, and Babylonia. Spanning from the Mediterranean to southern Arabia and spreading as far as Carthage and Abyssinia, they are subdivided into four primary branches: South Semitic (Arabic and Ethiopian), Middle Semitic (Canaanitish), North Semitic (Aramaic), and East Semitic (Akkadian). These languages share core features—triliteral roots, consonantal emphasis, minimal compounding, and streamlined syntax—while varying in grammatical complexity and preservation.… Learn Hebrew
Posted in History
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