< Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic

Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic/waral-

This Proto-Semitic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-Semitic

Alternative forms

Etymology

Very likely a borrowing, in consideration of the consonant pairing, which is, barring perhaps a breakdown of a quadriconsonantal or any such arbitrary occurrence, impossible, whether it be r and l or r and n, as there is a strict rule[1][2] that the second and third consonant of a triconsonantal Semitic root can only be identical but not otherwise homorganic; whereas a Proto-Hurro-Urartian origin is thinkable, compare *kinnār- and خُلَّر (ḵullar).

Noun

*waral- m

  1. monitor lizard

Inflection

Descendants

  • East Semitic:
    • Akkadian: 𒌨𒉡 (urnum)
  • West Semitic:
    • Central Semitic:
      • Arabic: وَرَل (waral), وَرَن (waran)
      • Northwest Semitic:
        • Aramaic:
          Jewish Literary Aramaic, Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: יַלָּא (yallā), יָלָא (yālā)
        • Canaanite:
          • Phoenician: *𐤉𐤋 (*yl /⁠*yūl⁠/)
            • Ancient Greek: ἴουλος (íoulos, catkin; woodlouse; the first growth of the whiskers and beard; corn-sheaf)
              • Latin: iūlus (catkin; woodlouse; rainbow wrasse)
    • Modern South Arabian:
      • Harsusi: rewōl
      • Mehri: rəwōl

References

  • Löw, Immanuel (1912) “Aramäische Lurchnamen”, in Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und verwandte Gebiete (in German), volume 26, pages 129–132
  • Militarev, Alexander, Kogan, Leonid (2005) Semitic Etymological Dictionary, volume II: Animal Names, Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, →ISBN, pages 316–317, Nr. 246
  • Zimmern, Heinrich (1915) Akkadische Fremdwörter als Beweis für babylonischen Kultureinfluss (in German), Leipzig: A. Edelmann, page 52, considers it foreign in Akkadian and Syriac and Arabic borrowed thence, but a borrowing could only have happened early in view of the Northwest Semitic change wy.
  1. Greenberg, Joseph Harold (1950) “The Patterning of Root Morphemes in Semitic”, in Word, volume 6, number 2, →DOI, page 162, point 2
  2. Vernet i Pons, Eulàlia (2011 March 1) “Semitic Root Incompatibilities and Historical Linguistics”, in Journal of Semitic Studies, volume 56, number 1, →DOI, page 4
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