Arabic as a Semitic Language
21
of how the common features between Arabic and the South Semitic languages
are to be explained. One hypothesis regards the internal
plurals in Arabic and
South Semitic as an independent development (see above, p. 18); alternatively,
the further development of internal plurals may be regarded as a phenomenon
that affected some of the languages in the West Semitic group, later to become
the South Semitic languages. This innovation did not spread to all the languages
of the West Semitic group. When the group split, some of them went south, later
to become the South-west Semitic languages, while Arabic remained behind and
came into closer contact with the other West Semitic languages, Canaanite and
Aramaic, together with which it developed a new verbal system, a definite article,
a feminine ending and other features.
A further subgrouping within the Central Semitic
languages is set up by
Hetzron on the basis of another feature, the suffix
Dostları ilə paylaş: