< Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic
Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic/bV-
Proto-Semitic
Etymology
Possibly from Proto-Afroasiatic *bǔ (“place”). Compare Beja -b (postposition), having a locative or directional meaning, and Egyptian bw (place, position).
Reconstruction notes
Though this entry is notated with the symbol for an unspecified vowel, ⟨V⟩, in this case it does not mean the vowel is indeterminate. Rather, both *bi- and *ba- existed in opposition and became conflated to various degrees in the descendants, such that it is most parsimonious to unify them under one headword. The same is the case for *lV-.
Descendants
- East Semitic:
- West Semitic:
- Central Semitic:
- Arabic: بِـ (bi-)
- Northwest Semitic:
- Old South Arabian:
- Hadrami: -𐩨 (-b)
- Minaean: -𐩨 (-b)
- Qatabanian: -𐩨 (-b)
- Sabaean: -𐩨 (-b)
- Ethiopian Semitic:
- North Ethiopian Semitic:
- Ge'ez: በ- (bä-)
- Tigre: ብ- (bə-), እብ (ʾəb), ቡ- (bu-) (with meaning differences)
- Tigrinya: ብ- (bə-) (also postpositionally), አብ (ʾäb) (or only its second part)
- South Ethiopian Semitic:
- Amharic: በ- (bä-), ብ- (bə-), ቢ- (bi-) (also postpositionally)
- Harari: -ቤ (-be, postposition)
- Gurage:
- Čaha: በ- (bä-)
- North Ethiopian Semitic:
- Central Semitic:
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