ASA (= Ancient South Arabian) documentation is testimony to a lengthy linguistic history in southern Arabia which predates the earliest written attestations. The hypothesis attributing the origin of ASA culture to immigration from the north is hard to endorse. The QAT (= Qatabanic) verb system and ASA more in general have strong parallels with the verb system of the north west of the second millennium. Just as the hypothesis of a recent wave of immigration to south Arabia is open to debate, so must the general idea of an ASA belonging to central Semitic as opposed to archaic southern Semitic be re-examined
This volume is an organized collection of inscriptions in Qatabanic, Marginal Qatabanic and Awsanite...
Studies on South Arabian anthropomorphic funerary stelae often mention a North Arabian influence in ...
Different strata of Semitic loanwords are successively identified in the lexicon of Northern Somali ...
Exhaustive knowledge of the long history of some areas of northern Arabia, as that of the history of...
New Qatabanic lexical material is presented and it is analysed from a philological and comparative p...
The second issue of Quaderni di Arabia Antica reviews a recent theory put forward by P. Stein. T...
This modest contribution attempts to demonstrate the problems related to diachronic research into So...
Until recently, Hadramitic was the least known and least studied among the Ancient South Arabian lan...
The history of Jawf is of fundamental importance in studying both the beginning of overland trade be...
This chapter is devoted to the linguistic characteristics of the six Modern South Arabian languages ...
This is a study of the material which is stated or claimed to be of South Arabian origin or directly...
The epigraphical documentation of Nashshān gives us some interesting data about the linguistic and c...
The special session in 2013, Languages of Southern Arabia, was the fifth in the Seminar for Arabian ...
The article deals with the Qatabanic root syt from a philological and comparative perspective. New l...
It is generally admitted that South Arabic and Ethiopic languages are closely related and form a dia...
This volume is an organized collection of inscriptions in Qatabanic, Marginal Qatabanic and Awsanite...
Studies on South Arabian anthropomorphic funerary stelae often mention a North Arabian influence in ...
Different strata of Semitic loanwords are successively identified in the lexicon of Northern Somali ...
Exhaustive knowledge of the long history of some areas of northern Arabia, as that of the history of...
New Qatabanic lexical material is presented and it is analysed from a philological and comparative p...
The second issue of Quaderni di Arabia Antica reviews a recent theory put forward by P. Stein. T...
This modest contribution attempts to demonstrate the problems related to diachronic research into So...
Until recently, Hadramitic was the least known and least studied among the Ancient South Arabian lan...
The history of Jawf is of fundamental importance in studying both the beginning of overland trade be...
This chapter is devoted to the linguistic characteristics of the six Modern South Arabian languages ...
This is a study of the material which is stated or claimed to be of South Arabian origin or directly...
The epigraphical documentation of Nashshān gives us some interesting data about the linguistic and c...
The special session in 2013, Languages of Southern Arabia, was the fifth in the Seminar for Arabian ...
The article deals with the Qatabanic root syt from a philological and comparative perspective. New l...
It is generally admitted that South Arabic and Ethiopic languages are closely related and form a dia...
This volume is an organized collection of inscriptions in Qatabanic, Marginal Qatabanic and Awsanite...
Studies on South Arabian anthropomorphic funerary stelae often mention a North Arabian influence in ...
Different strata of Semitic loanwords are successively identified in the lexicon of Northern Somali ...