We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
The Semiticlanguages also are all varieties of one form of speech.
2
Professor of SemiticLanguages and Literatures and Hellenistic Greek, University of Michigan
3
Edited by Morris Jastrow, Jr., Professor of SemiticLanguages in the University of Pennsylvania
4
Hebrew and Arabic are closely related, both being Semiticlanguages.
5
Professor of SemiticLanguages in the University of Pennsylvania
6
The Semiticlanguages differ widely from the Indo-European in reference to their grammar, vocabulary, and idioms.
7
She was taught to write, and wrote from right to left, as in the Semiticlanguages.
8
All the Semiticlanguages have tri-literal roots.
9
American Journal of SemiticLanguages.
10
(1) The American Journal of SemiticLanguages and Literatures (University of Chicago; quarterly).
11
The only large work was William Wright's "Lectures on the Comparative Grammar of the SemiticLanguages", Cambridge, 1890.)
12
He spent a part of the following year in Oberlin Theological Seminary in special study of the Semiticlanguages and Hellenistic Greek.
13
212; ''The Temples of Lower Nubia,'' in the American Journal of SemiticLanguages and Literatures, October 1906.
14
In some of the Semiticlanguages the word for "father" signifies "maker," and the same thing occurs elsewhere among primitive people
15
Although Semiticlanguages aren't closely related to Indo-European languages, the words for "death" in Sanskrit ("mrit") and Latin ("mortus") are similar.
16
Yet in a supposedly Hellenic city like Antioch, less than half the population knows Greek; the rest speak one or another of the Semiticlanguages.