Canaanite shift
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In
Nature and cause
This vowel shift is well attested in Hebrew and other Canaanite languages, but its exact nature is unclear and contested.
Theory of unconditioned shift
Many scholars consider this shift to be unconditioned. This position states that there were no conditioning factors such as stress or surrounding consonants which affected whether or not any given
Theory of stress conditioning
Some other scholars point to Hebrew words like שמאלי səmālī (an adjective meaning "on the left"), in which the original *ā is thought to be preserved. Since such a preservation would be hard to explain by secondary processes like
Responses to stress conditioning theory
Those who support a theory of unconditioned shift contend that stress conditioning does not account for the fact that often *ā became ō even in positions where it was neither stressed nor part of an inflectional or derivational paradigm, and that such forms as שמאלי may indeed be a secondary development, since שמאל səmōl, the unsuffixed basic form of the word, actually does contain an o. The a of שמאלי, therefore could be explained as having occurred after the vowel shift had ceased to be synchronically productive.
A parallel may be found in the pre-classical history of
In much the same way the shape of such words as שמאלי may, in fact, represent a secondary process occurring after the Canaanite shift ceased to be productive.
Arabic–Hebrew parallels
The shift was so productive in Canaanite languages that it altered their inflectional and derivational morphologies wherever they contained the reflex of a pre-Canaanite *ā, as can be seen in Hebrew, the most attested of Canaanite languages, by comparing it with Arabic, a well-attested non-Canaanite Semitic language.
Present participle of Qal verbs
Classical Arabic فاعل (fāʻil) vs. Tiberian Hebrew פועל (pōʻēl)[2]
Arabic | Translation | Hebrew | Translation |
---|---|---|---|
كاتِب kātib | writer | כּוֹתֵב kōṯēḇ | writer, writing |
فاتِح fātiḥ | opener | פּוֹתֵחַ pōṯēaḥ | opener, opening (attrib.) |
كاهِن kāhin | soothsayer, augur, priest | כֹּהֵן kōhēn | priest (male descendant of Aaron) |
Feminine plural
Classical Arabic ات- (-āt) vs. Tiberian Hebrew ות- (-ōṯ)
Arabic | Hebrew | Translation |
---|---|---|
بَنات banāt | בָּנוֹת bānōṯ | girls, daughters |
مِئات miʼāt | מֵאוֹת mēʼōṯ | hundreds |
مَلِكات malikāt | מְלָכוֹת məlāḵōṯ | queens |
Noun
Classical Arabic فعال (fi‘āl, fa‘āl) vs. Tiberian Hebrew פעול (pă‘ōl, pā‘ōl)
Arabic | Hebrew | Translation |
---|---|---|
حمار ḥimār | חמור ḥămōr | donkey |
سلام salām | שלום šālōm | peace |
لسان lisān | לשון lāšōn | tongue |
Classical Arabic فأل (faʼl) vs. Tiberian Hebrew פול, פאל (pōl)
Arabic | Hebrew | Translation |
---|---|---|
كأس kaʼs | כוס kōs | glass |
رأس raʼs | ראש rōš | head, chief |
Other words
Arabic | Hebrew | Translation |
---|---|---|
لا lā | לא lō | no |
ذراع ḏirāʻ | זרוע zərōaʻ | arm |
عالم ʻālam | עולם ʻōlām | world, universe |
In one of the above lexical items (rōš), the shift did not only affect originally long vowels, but also originally short vowels occurring in the vicinity of a historically attested glottal stop in Canaanite.
Transcriptions of the Phoenician language reveal that the change also took place there – see
Uses of the shift
Often when new source material in an old Semitic language is uncovered, the Canaanite shift may be used to date the source material or to establish that the source material is written in a specifically Canaanite language. The shift is especially useful since it affects long vowels whose presence is likely to be recorded by
See also
References
- .
- ^ Wehr 1993
Bibliography
- Blau, Joshua(1996), Studies in Hebrew Linguistics, Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, The Hebrew University
- Cross, Frank (1980), "Newly Found Inscriptions in Old Canaanite and Early Phoenician Scripts", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, vol. 238, no. 238, The American Schools of Oriental Research, pp. 1–20, S2CID 222445150
- Fox, Joshua (1996), "A Sequence of Vowel Shifts in Phoenician and Other Languages", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 55, pp. 37–47, S2CID 161890998
- Wehr, Hans (1993), Arabic–English Dictionary