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The Moabite language, also known as the Moabite dialect, is an extinct sub-language or dialect of the Canaanite languages, themselves a branch of Northwest Semitic languages, formerly spoken in the region described in the Bible as Moab (modern day central-western Jordan) in the early 1st millennium BC.
- early half of 1st millennium BCE
- Phoenician alphabet
- Formerly spoken in northwestern Jordan
Idioma hebreo. Moabita. Escritura. alfabeto fenicio. Reino de Moab en el siglo IX a. C. [ editar datos en Wikidata] El moabita fue un antiguo dialecto hebraico utilizado por los moabitas. Se ubicaban al oeste de la actual Jordania. Se escribía mediante una variante del alfabeto fenicio. 1 .
- alrededor del siglo VI a. C.
- Levante mediterráneo
Moabite alphabet, eastern subdivision of the Canaanite branch of the early Semitic alphabet, closely related to the early Hebrew alphabet. The best-known example of the Moabite alphabet is from the Meshaʿ, or Moabite, Stone (Louvre, Paris), which was discovered in 1868 at Dibon, east of the Dead.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Created. c. 840 BCE. Discovered. 1868–70. Present location. Louvre. Identification. AO 5066. The Mesha Stele, also known as the Moabite Stone, is a stele dated around 840 BCE containing a significant Canaanite inscription in the name of King Mesha of Moab (a kingdom located in modern Jordan ).
- c. 840 BCE
- Basalt
- 1868–70
- Moabite language
The Moabite language was spoken in Moab. It was a Canaanite language closely related to Biblical Hebrew, Ammonite and Edomite, and was written using a variant of the Phoenician alphabet. Most of our knowledge of it comes from the Mesha Stele, which is the only known extensive text in this language.
Los moabitas, cuyo territorio se conocía como Moab (en hebreo: מוֹאָב , Môʾāḇ( tiberiano), Moʾav; en asirio Muʾaba, Maʾba o Maʾab; en egipcio Muʾab; en árabe: مؤاب , Muʾāb; en griego: Μωάβ, Mōáb o Μοαβῖτις, Moabitis ), fueron una civilización semita que vivía al este del mar Muerto, en ...
They were spoken in ancient times in Palestine, on the coast of Syria, and in scattered colonies elsewhere around the Mediterranean. An early form of Canaanite is attested in the Tell el-Amarna letters (c. 1400 bc). Moabite, which is very close…