12-26-2007, 06:17 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: the far corner of my mind
Posts: 8,711
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Archaea
as I was looking at the differences between Syriac and Aramaic. Interestingly, Syriac is in some instances the same thing.
It is a Semitic language with triliteral roots, but it has tense, which most Semitic languages do not, and a verb conjunctive, standard state, intensive state and extensive state. The script is Arabic related and was highly spoken until the eighth century when Arabic supplanted it.
So I find a language subgroup which I've never even heard of, it's in the Afro-Asiatic languages, called the Omotic languages, mostly in Ethiopia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omotic_languages
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Like most people, I only mock things I don't understand. Don't be so sensitive. Think of me as the guy with the pitchfork and torch chasing Frankenstein's monster.
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Sorry for th e tpyos.
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