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Aramaic: A History of the First World Language is unavailable, but you can change that!

In this volume—the first complete history of Aramaic from its origins to the present day—Holger Gzella provides an accessible overview of the language perhaps most well known for being spoken by Jesus of Nazareth. Gzella, one of the world’s foremost Aramaicists, begins with the earliest evidence of Aramaic in inscriptions from the beginning of the first millennium BCE, then traces its emergence...

reading,” itself calqued from Arabic or Hebrew) reduced somewhat the ambiguity of the originally purely consonantal Phoenician way of spelling. This practice entailed the use of the consonantal signs for h, w, and y in a second function, using them to spell the long vowels a, u, o, i, and e (normally marked with a bar in scientific transcription: ā, etc.), at first only at the end of a word, but to an increasing degree also within a word. This was presumably an invention of the Arameans, as this
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