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Re: R: Re: Greenberg's universals

From:Dan Sulani <dnsulani@...>
Date:Friday, September 15, 2000, 8:10
On 14 Sept, I wrote:

>> Semitic, VSO? Examples, please? >> The Hebrew that I am exposed to daily >> seems pretty SVO to me!
On 14 Sept, Steg answered: Biblical (and i think all pre-Modern) Hebrew was VSO: Bibl. _vayomer Hashem "yehi or!"_ vs. Mod. _Hashem amar "yehi or!!"_ ("God said, "let there be light!") Bibl. _vatehi ha'aretz safa ahhat udevarim ahhadim_ vs. Mod. _ha'aretz hayta safa ahhat udevarim ahhadim_ ("the land was one language and few words") Mishnaic _amar r' aqiva, "..."_ vs. Mod. _r' aqiva amar, "..."_ You're right, of course, Steg. It was right before my eyes, had I only bothered to look. Actually the VSO starts in the very first verse of the Bible and goes on from there. Thanx. And on 14 Sept, Matt answered:
>You're right, of course. Biblical Hebrew was VSO, as is (IIRC) Classical >Arabic. Most modern varieties of these languages have drifted towards SVO,
but
>otherwise preserve the core typological properties of VSO languages. (VSO >order has been preserved in the Berber languages, which are generally
believed
>to be related to the Semitic languages.) > >Semitic is actually pretty fluid when it comes to word order types: The >Ethiopian Semitic languages are all SOV...
Interesting. What's the situation in the Hamitic branch of Afro-Asiatic? Or Proto-Afro-Asiatic itself?
> >> FWIW, Hebrew has a definite article >> and lacks the indefinite article. >> (I believe that the situation in Arabic is similar.) > >It is. For what it's worth, I don't know of any VSO languages with >*indefinite* articles, just definite ones. I don't know what, if anything, >this means. (Of course, indefinite articles--distinct from the word for >"one"--seem to be rather rare.)
In most cases, is the indefinite article derived from the word for "one"? Dan Sulani -------------------------------------------------------------------- likehsna rtem zuv tikuhnuh auag inuvuz vaka'a. A word is an awesome thing.