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TheVerb in Semitic Languages / Brueckelman's Philology of the Semitic Languages as Example

JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE STUDIES, 2023
Arabic is the language of the Holy Quran, a branch of a group of languages known to Orientalists as Semitic languages, and Orientalists have spent considerable efforts to study these languages, and wrote many books and researches about. The Semites are the languages that the orientalist Schulzer called the Hebrew, Abyssinian and Syriac languages ...
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Semites and Semitism: From Philology to the Language of Myth

Philological Encounters, 2017
This contribution analyses the transition from the “Semites”, which were derived, in early Semitic philology, from linguistic classification, to “Semitism,” a category combining linguistics, psychology, and cultural history. Goldziher’s critique of Renan’s understanding of Semitism not only led to a new logic of peoples in an economy of invention ...
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šafʿala-Verbs in Jordanian and Standard Arabic: A Lexical and Etymological Study in Light of Semitic and Classical Arabic Philology

Quaderni di Studi Arabi, 2023
Abstract The article discusses the etymological origin of verbs like šaqlaba, šaḥtafa and šaḥṭaṭa, which are relatively common in Jordanian and other Arabic dialects of the Levant. While Arabic grammarians and philologists have identified these verbs as quadriliteral and mostly colloquial, the article contends that they could often be regarded as ...
Oliver Ritter   +2 more
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The Semitic Component in Yiddish and its Ideological Role in Yiddish Philology

Philological Encounters, 2017
The article discusses the ideological role played by the Semitic component in Yiddish in four major texts of Yiddish philology from the first half of the 20th century: Ysroel Haim Taviov’s “The Hebrew Elements of the Jargon” (1904); Ber Borochov’s “The Tasks of Yiddish Philology” (1913); Nokhem Shtif’s “The Social Differentiation of Yiddish: Hebrew ...
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The Contributions of Frank Moore Cross to Semitic and Hebrew Philology

Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 2014
Frank Moore Cross's contributions to Semitic and Hebrew philology were both direct and indirect: direct, in his publications on aspects of Hebrew, Phoenician, and Aramaic grammar; and indirect, in ...
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