Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic/ʔaḥad-
Proto-Semitic
editAdjective
edit*ʔaḥad-
Usage notes
edit- Various reconstructions proposed, e.g. *waḥad-.
- Often claimed to mean "one", but Wilson-Wright (2014) provides evidence to suggest that it was not at all used as a cardinal numeral in Proto-Semitic but rather supplanted earlier *ʕašt- as a cardinal numeral in West Semitic languages, mostly losing its adjectival sense.
Inflection
editDeclension of *ʔaḥad-
Case | Singular | Dual | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | f | m | f | m | f | |
Nominative | *ʔaḥadum | *ʔaḥadatum | *ʔaḥadāna | *ʔaḥadatāna | *ʔaḥadūna | *ʔaḥadātum |
Genitive | *ʔaḥadim | *ʔaḥadatim | *ʔaḥadayna | *ʔaḥadatayna | *ʔaḥadīna | *ʔaḥadātim |
Accusative | *ʔaḥadam | *ʔaḥadatam |
Descendants
edit- East Semitic:
- Akkadian: 𒀸 m (wēdum)
- West Semitic:
References
edit- Wilson-Wright, Aren, "The Word for 'One' in Proto-Semitic", Journal of Semitic Studies 59.1 (2014) 1-13.
- Huehnergard, John (2019) “Proto-Semitic”, in Huehnergard, John and Na'ama Pat-El, editors, The Semitic Languages, 2nd edition, Routledge, →ISBN, page 61