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  1. Rumpun bahasa Semit Barat Laut. Rumpun bahasa Semit Barat Laut adalah suatu bahasa Semit yang meliputi bahasa-bahasa pribumi di wilayah Syam. Bahasa-bahasa itu muncul dari Common Semitic di Zaman Perunggu Dini. Pertama kali dibuktikan dengan nama-nama orang yang diidentifikasi sebagai orang Amori di Zaman Perunggu Tengah.

  2. Proto-Sinaitic / Proto-Canaanite. The Proto-Sinaitic script was the first alphabetic writing system and developed sometime between about 1900 and 1700 BC. People speaking a Semitic language and living in Egypt and Sinai adapted the Egyptian hieroglyphic or hieratic scripts to write their language using the acrophonic principle.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SyllabarySyllabary - Wikipedia

    The languages of India and Southeast Asia, as well as the Ethiopian Semitic languages, have a type of alphabet called an abugida or alphasyllabary. In these scripts, unlike in pure syllabaries, syllables starting with the same consonant are largely expressed with graphemes regularly based on common graphical elements.

  4. The South Semitic scripts are a family of alphabets that had split from Proto-Sinaitic script by the 10th century BC. The family has two main branches: Ancient North Arabian (ANA) and Ancient South Arabian (ASA). The scripts were exclusive to Arabia and the Horn of Africa. All the ANA and most of the ASA scripts fell out of use by the 6th century AD. The exception was Geʽez, a child of ASA in ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AlephAleph - Wikipedia

    Aleph (or alef or alif, transliterated ʾ) is the first letter of the Semitic abjads, including Phoenician ʾālep 𐤀, Hebrew ʾālef א, Aramaic ʾālap 𐡀, Syriac ʾālap̄ ܐ, Arabic ʾalif ا, and North Arabian 𐪑. It also appears as South Arabian 𐩱 and Ge'ez ʾälef አ.

  6. The Ancient South Arabian script (Old South Arabian: 𐩣𐩯𐩬𐩵ms3nd; modern Arabic : الْمُسْنَدmusnad) branched from the Proto-Sinaitic script in about the late 2nd millennium BCE. It was used for writing the Old South Arabian languages Sabaic, Qatabanic, Hadramautic, Minaean, and Hasaitic, and the ancient language of Eritrea, Geʽez in Dʿmt. The earliest instances of the ...

  7. Bible translations into Geʽez, an ancient South Semitic language of the Ethiopian branch, date back to the 6th century at least, making them one of the world's oldest Bible translations.