This paper examines the evidence for the marginal feminine endings *-ay- and *-āy- in Proto-Semitic, and the feminine endings *-e and *-a in Proto-Berber. Their similar formation (*CV̆CC-ay/āy), semantics (verbal abstracts, underived concrete feminine nouns) and plural morphology (replacement of the feminine suffix by a plural suffix with -w-) suggest that this feminine formation should be reconstructed to a shared ancestor which may be called Proto-Berbero-Semitic.</p
A well-known curiosity of Semitic morphosyntax is the phenomenon of reverse gender agreement in the ...
Tocharian had a large number of demonstrative pronouns and determiners, whose basic element derives ...
Hittite shows that the ”genericum”, as a noun referring to people underspecified for gender, is a t...
This paper examines the feminine ending -at in the Qurʾānic Consonantal Text. It argues that from th...
and diachronic points of view. The present article can only touch on some of the most pro-vocative i...
This paper discusses the feminine nominal suffixes -at and plural -āt in the Shammari Arabic dialect...
The vowel -ā can be identified as a marker of nominal and verbal plurality in different Semitic and ...
The Proto-Semitic genitive ending on triptotic nouns is commonly reconstructed as *-im (unbound stat...
Besides the regular noun prefix a-/ta- most Berber languages possess a much less common prefix i-/ti...
The aim of this chapter is to draw a concise sketch of Berber evaluative morphology. Within the stud...
International audienceThis contribution examines the morphological and syntactic genesis of the init...
International audienceDiscussion of the previous theories concerning the origin of feminine gender i...
This paper discusses variation in the gender of nouns in Maay, a language of Somalia. Lan- guages of...
The present paper investigates agreement patterns with plural controllers in Fezzani Arabic (southw...
This work investigates an unusual and intriguing concatenative morpho-phonological process, which oc...
A well-known curiosity of Semitic morphosyntax is the phenomenon of reverse gender agreement in the ...
Tocharian had a large number of demonstrative pronouns and determiners, whose basic element derives ...
Hittite shows that the ”genericum”, as a noun referring to people underspecified for gender, is a t...
This paper examines the feminine ending -at in the Qurʾānic Consonantal Text. It argues that from th...
and diachronic points of view. The present article can only touch on some of the most pro-vocative i...
This paper discusses the feminine nominal suffixes -at and plural -āt in the Shammari Arabic dialect...
The vowel -ā can be identified as a marker of nominal and verbal plurality in different Semitic and ...
The Proto-Semitic genitive ending on triptotic nouns is commonly reconstructed as *-im (unbound stat...
Besides the regular noun prefix a-/ta- most Berber languages possess a much less common prefix i-/ti...
The aim of this chapter is to draw a concise sketch of Berber evaluative morphology. Within the stud...
International audienceThis contribution examines the morphological and syntactic genesis of the init...
International audienceDiscussion of the previous theories concerning the origin of feminine gender i...
This paper discusses variation in the gender of nouns in Maay, a language of Somalia. Lan- guages of...
The present paper investigates agreement patterns with plural controllers in Fezzani Arabic (southw...
This work investigates an unusual and intriguing concatenative morpho-phonological process, which oc...
A well-known curiosity of Semitic morphosyntax is the phenomenon of reverse gender agreement in the ...
Tocharian had a large number of demonstrative pronouns and determiners, whose basic element derives ...
Hittite shows that the ”genericum”, as a noun referring to people underspecified for gender, is a t...