Meaning of Liḥyānite | Babel Free
liˈjɑˌnaɪtDefinitions
Examples
“The determinate state of the noun is marked in the “Canaanite” languages of the first millennium B.C., in Pre-Islamic North Arabian, in Arabic, in Modern South Arabian languages, and in Tigre by a prefixed definite article. Its earliest attested form is ha-, used in Hebrew, Phoenician, Ammonite, Moabite, Edomite, Liḥyānite, Ṣafaitic, Thamūdic, and in the Modern South Arabian languages where the definite article a- / ä- is prefixed to definite nouns the initial element of which is a voiced or glottalized consonant […]”
“Today Arabic must be regarded as one of the important world languages. Its earliest written forms are provided by pre-Islamic North and East Arabian inscriptions using a variant of the South Arabian monumental script. The attested dialects are Liḥyānite or Dedanite in Hedjāz, Thamūdic in north-eastern Hedjāz, Safaitic in southern Syria and Jordan, Hasaean in the oasis of al-Hāsa’, and Nabataean Arabic, represented by a few inscriptions in Aramaic script.”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
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