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Re: Ant: Re: Question about T and D

From:Steg Belsky <draqonfayir@...>
Date:Wednesday, September 21, 2005, 2:57
On Sep 20, 2005, at 7:26 PM, Steven Williams wrote:
> The Semitic languages got their [T]'s and [D]'s from > the intervocalic and syllable-final spirantization of > plosives, commonly known by the acronym 'begad kefat' > (at least in Hebrew). > > Simply put, the plosives [b], [g], [d], [k], [p] and > [t] fricativize into [v], [G], [D], [x], [f] and [T]. > This basic theme runs through Hebrew at least.
This is only true for Hebrew, Aramaic, and possibly other Northwest Semitic languages. All Semitic languages also inherited original */T/ and */D/, which were preserved in Arabic and other languages. In Hebrew, original */T/ and */D/ merged into /S/ and /z/. In Aramaic, they merged into /t/ and /d/. In both Hebrew and Aramaic, they eventually reappeared as allophones of /t/ and /d/. -Stephen (Steg) "...The most important development in the next 25 years? Dude, paleontologists don't get issued crystal balls. We work on the *past*, remember? Seriously, anything I predict would look dumb if anyone even bothered to read it in 2030." ~ prof. kevin padian

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Steven Williams <feurieaux@...>Ant: Re: Ant: Re: Question about T and D