Will Parsons wrote: 

"Hebrew of course is considered part of the Semitic family of languages, part 
of a larger Afro-Asiatic family.  How would the computer reconstruction work 
here?  Unlike the scenario of the article using the Austronesian languages, 
where one has a multitude of modern languages/dialects, but essentially no 
historical written evidence, the situation of the Semitic languages seems to me 
to be precisely the opposite. 

One has a dearth of Semitic languages that have survived to modern times. Of 
course, Arabic has been a huge success, dividing into a spectrum of modern 
spoken dialects unified by a common literary language (somewhat similar to the 
position of early Romance dialects vis-à-vis literary Latin in mediaeval 
times).  I'm not sure about the situation of the African branch of the Semitic 
languages (i.e., the descendents of Ge`ez), but in the Asiatic branch, first 
Aramaic seems to have eclipsed other Semitic languages, including Hebrew and 
Akkadian, and then Arabic eclipsed Aramaic." 

Modern Hebrew is of course the "other" modern Asiatic-Semitic language, apart 
from Arabic, but because of its revivification, does not make itself an ideal 
candidate for historical comparison.  (I understand that Aramaic still 
survives, but I suspect has been heavily Arabicized, and may be of marginal 
status)." 

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Ishinan: Will, I totally agree with your assessment. Most of the languages of 
the Afro-Asiatic group were originally visibly related to each other. Some more 
than others and their similarities were greater the further back we go in time. 

Holger Pedersen (1867-1953), a Danish linguist who made significant 
contributions to language science once wrote in his famous 1931's book "The 
Discovery of Language" about the "Semitic languages". According to him (and 
linguists in general), the Hebrew, Aramaic, Assyrian, Babylonian, and Akkadian 
languages had all undergone significant linguistic degeneration. 

Historically, Hebrews living in the Persian Empire adopted Aramaic, and 
quickly, enough Hebrew fell into disuse as Aramaic became the vernacular 
language. By the time the Old Testament, including the Pentateuch, the language 
had considerably deteriorated. The vocabulary of the Hebrew language had 
changed so much that there was no similarity to the original. Eventually, 
Hebrew at some point ceased to be the language of the Hebrews. 

Only Arabic, due to its relative isolation in the Arabian peninsula, remained 
closer to the old stratum of the Semitic form of the proto-language and 
therefore was closer to the Canaanite/Ugaritic, than Akkadian, Assyrian, 
Babylonian, Hebrew, and/or Aramaic. 

Semitic Linguists, aware of this deficiency in the Hebrew/Aramaic languages, 
have always referred primarily to Classical Arabic (due to its extensive rich 
vocabulary and alphabet inventory which is closer to Proto-Semitic alphabet) 
along with Ugaritic to explain the various Semitic roots and their etymologies. 

Best regards. 

Ishinan Ishibashi
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