Northwest Semitic languages
Northwest Semitic[ḍād|] is a division of the Semitic languages comprising the indigenous languages of the Levant. It emerged from Proto-Semitic in the Early Bronze Age. It is first attested in proper names identified as Amorite in the Middle Bronze Age. The oldest coherent texts are in Ugaritic, dating to the Late Bronze Age, which by the time of the Bronze Age collapse are joined by Old Aramaic, and by the Iron Age by Sutean and the Canaanite languages.
The term was coined by Carl Brockelmann in 1908, who separated Fritz Hommel's 1883 classification of Semitic languages into Northwest, East Semitic and Southwest.
Brockelmann's Canaanite sub-group includes Ugaritic, Phoenician and Hebrew. Some scholars now regard Ugaritic either as belonging to a separate branch of Northwest Semitic or a dialect of Amorite.
Central Semitic is a proposed intermediate group comprising Northwest Semitic and Arabic.
Central Semitic is either a subgroup of West Semitic or a top-level division of Semitic alongside East Semitic and South Semitic. SIL Ethnologue in its system of classification eliminates Northwest Semitic entirely by joining Canaanite and Arabic in a "South-Central" group which together with Aramaic forms Central Semitic. The Deir Alla Inscription and Samalian have been identified as language varieties falling outside Aramaic proper but with some similarities to it, possibly in an "Aramoid" or "Syrian" subgroup.
It is clear that the Taymanitic script expressed a distinct linguistic variety that is not Arabic and not closely related to Hismaic or Safaitic, while it can tentatively be suggested that it was more closely related to Northwest Semitic.
Historical development
The time period for the split of Northwest Semitic from Proto-Semitic or from other Semitic groups is uncertain. Richard C. Steiner suggested in 2011 that the earliest attestation of Northwest Semitic is to be found in snake spells from the Egyptian Pyramid Texts, dating to the mid-third millennium BC. However, other scholars question these findings. Amorite personal names and words in Akkadian and Egyptian texts from the late third millennium to the mid-second millennium BC and the language of the Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions dated to the first half of the second millennium otherwise constitute the earliest traces of Northwest Semitic, the first Northwest Semitic language attested in full being Ugaritic in the 14th century BC.During the early 1st millennium, the Phoenician language was spread throughout the Mediterranean by Phoenician colonists, most notably to Carthage in today's Tunisia. The Phoenician alphabet is of fundamental importance in human history as the source and ancestor of the Greek alphabet, the later Latin alphabet, the Aramaic, Syriac, and Arabic writing systems, Germanic runes, and ultimately Cyrillic.
From the 8th century BC, the use of Imperial Aramaic by the Neo-Assyrian Empire and the succeeding Neo-Babylonian Empire and Achaemenid Empire, a form of the Aramaic language, spread throughout the Northwest Semitic region of the Levant, northern regions of the Arabian peninsula and southern regions of Anatolia, and gradually drove most of the other Northwest Semitic languages to extinction. The ancient Judaeans adopted Aramaic for daily use, and parts of the Tanakh are written in it. Hebrew was preserved, however, as a Jewish liturgical language and language of scholarship, and resurrected in the 19th century, with modern adaptations, to become the Modern Hebrew language of the State of Israel.
After the Muslim conquests of the 7th century, Arabic began to gradually replace Aramaic throughout the region. Classical Syriac-Aramaic survives today as the liturgical language of the Assyrian Church of the East, Syriac Orthodox Church, Chaldean Catholic Church, and other churches of Syriac Christians. It is spoken in modern dialects with an estimated one million fluent speakers by endangered indigenous populations scattered throughout the Middle East, most commonly by the Assyrians, Gnostic Mandeans, the Arameans of Maaloula and Jubb'adin, and Mizrahi Jews. There is also an Aramaic substratum in Levantine and Mesopotamian Arabic.
Phonology
Sound changes
, Ugaritic lost the sound- ṣ́, replacing it with . That this same sound became Voiced pharyngeal fricative| in Aramaic, suggests that Ugaritic is not the parent language of the group. An example of this sound shift can be seen in the word for earth: Ugaritic , Punic , Tiberian Hebrew , Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic .
| shift | Ugaritic | Aramaic | Biblical Hebrew | translation |
| →zayin| | ??? ḏanabu | דנבא danḇā | זנב zānāḇ | tail |
| → | ??? ṯalāṯu | תלת təlāṯ | שלש šālōš | three |
| → | ??? ẓillu | טללא ṭillālā | צל ṣēl | shadow |
Vowels
Proto-Northwest Semitic had three contrastive vowel qualities and a length distinction, resulting in six vocalic phonemes: *a, *ā, *i, *ī, *u, and *ū. While *aw, *ay, *iw, *iy, *uw, and *uy are often referred to as diphthongs, they do not seem to have had a different status as such, rather being a normal sequence of a short vowel and a glide.Consonants
Suchard proposes that: "*s, both from original *s and original *ṯ, then shifted further back to a postalveolar *š, while deaffrication of *ts and *dz to *s and *z gave these phonemes their Hebrew values, as well as merging original *dz with original *ḏ. In fact, original *s may have been realized as anything between and ; both values are attested in foreign transcriptions of early Northwest Semitic languages".Emphatics
In Proto-Northwest Semitic the emphatics were articulated with pharyngealization. Its shift to backing has been considered a Central Semitic innovation.According to Faber, the assimilation *-ṣt->-ṣṭ- in the Dt stem in Hebrew suggests backing rather than glottalization. The same assimilation is attested in Aramaic.
Grammar
Nouns
Three cases can be reconstructed for Proto-Northwest Semitic nouns, two genders and three numbers.Pronouns
Proto-Northwest Semitic pronouns had 2 genders and 3 grammatical cases.Numerals
Reconstruction of Proto-Northwest Semitic numbers.| Number | Masculine | Feminine |
| One | *ʔaḥadum | *ʔaḥattum |
| Two | *ṯnāna | *ṯintāna |
| Three | *ṯalāṯatum | *ṯalāṯum |
| Four | *ʔarbaʕatum | *ʔarbaʕum |
| Five | *ḫamisatum | *ḫamisum |
| Six | *siṯṯatum | *siṯṯum |
| Seven | *sabʕatum | *sabʕum |
| Eight | *ṯamāniyatum | *ṯamāniyum |
| Nine | *tisʕatum | *tisʕum |
| Ten | *ʕaśaratum | *ʕaśrum |
Verbs
The G fientive or G-stem is the basic, most common, unmarked stem. The G-stem expresses events. The vowel of the prefix of the prefix conjugations in Proto-Northwest Semitic was *-a- and the stem was *-qṭul- or *-qṭil-, as in *ya-qṭul-u 'he will kill', while the stem of the suffix conjugation had two *a vowels, as in *qaṭal-a 'he has killed'.The G stative is like the fientive but expressing states instead of events. For the prefix conjugation of stative roots, the vowel of the prefix was *-i- and it contained an *a vowel, e.g. *yi-kbad-u 'he will become heavy', while the second vowel of the suffix conjugation was either *-i-, as in *kabid-a 'he is/was/will be heavy', or *-u-, as in *ʕamuq-a 'it is/was/will be deep'. Whether the G-stem stative suffix conjugation has *i or *u in the stem is lexically determined.
The N-stem is marked by a prefixed *n-. It is mediopassive which is a grammatical voice that subsumes the meanings of both the middle voice and the passive voice. In other words, it expresses a range of meanings where the subject is the patient of the verb, e.g. passive, medial, and reciprocal. The stem of the suffix conjugation is *naqṭal-, and the stem of the prefix conjugations is *-nqaṭil-; as is the case with stative G-stem verbs, the prefix vowel is *-i-, resulting in forms like *yi-nqaṭil-u 'he will be killed'.
The D-stem is marked by gemination of the second radical in all forms. It has a range of different meanings, mostly transitive. The stem of the suffix conjugation is *qaṭṭil-, and the same stem is used for the prefix conjugations. It is not clear whether the Proto-Northwest-Semitic prefix vowel should be reconstructed as *-u-, the form inherited from Proto-Semitic, or as *-a-, which is somewhat supported by evidence from Ugaritic and Hebrew.
The C-stem more often than not expresses a causative meaning. The most likely reconstructions are *haqṭil- for the stem of the suffix conjugation and *-saqṭil- for the stem of the prefix conjugations. The reconstructed prefix vowel is the same as that of the D-stem, and similarly, the participle is to be reconstructed as *musaqṭilum.
All of the stems listed here, except the N-stem, could bring forth further derivation. The "internal passive stems" aren't marked by affixes, but express their passivity through a different vowel pattern. The Gp prefix conjugation can be reconstructed as *yu-qṭal-u 'he will be killed'. Reflexive or reciprocal meanings can be expressed by the t-stems, formed with a *t which was either infixed after the first radical or prefixed before it.
The precise reconstruction are uncertain.
| G fientive | G stative | D | C | |
| perfect | *qaṭal-a | *kabid-a | *qaṭṭil-a | *ha-qṭil-a |
| imperfect | *ya-qṭul-u | *yi-kbad-u | *yV-qaṭṭil-u | *yVsa-qṭil-u |
| participle | *qāṭil-um | *kabid-um | *mu-qaṭṭil-um | *musa-qṭil-um |
| Gp | N | Dp | Cp | |
| perfect | *quṭVl-a | *na-qṭal-a | *quṭṭVl-a | *hu-qṭVl-a |
| imperfect | *yu-qṭal-u | *yin-qaṭil-u | *yu-qVṭṭal-u | *yusV-qṭal-u |
| participle | *qaṭīl-um, *qaṭūl-um | *na-qṭal-um or *mun-qaṭil-um? | *mu-qVṭṭal-um | *musV-qṭal-um |
| Gt | tD | Ct | ||
| perfect | *qtaṭVl-a? | *ta-qaṭṭVl-a | *sta-qṭVl-a? | |
| imperfect | *yi-qtaṭVl-u | *yVt-qaṭṭVl-u | *yVsta-qṭVl-u | |
| participle | *mu-qtaṭVl-um | *mut-qaṭṭVl-um | *musta-qṭVl-um |