< Reconstruction:Proto-Hurro-Urartian
Reconstruction:Proto-Hurro-Urartian/kinnar
Proto-Hurro-Urartian
Etymology
Unknown; possibly borrowed from Proto-Semitic *kinnār- (“lyre”), if not the reverse,[1] which is however surely of foreign origin since non-identical homorganic second and third root consonants are disallowed for a Semitic word.[2][3]
Descendants
- Hurrian: *kinnar
- ⇒ Hurrian: 𒇽𒆠𒅔𒈾𒊒𒄷𒇷 (LÚki-in-na-ru-ḫu-li /kinnaruḫuli/, “musician”)
- → Proto-Anatolian: *kinar
- Hittite: *kinar[4]
- ⇒ Hittite: 𒇽𒆠𒉪𒊑𒆷𒀸 (LÚki-nir-tal-la-aš /kinirtallaš/, “lyre-player”), 𒇽𒆠𒈜𒊑𒆷𒀸 (LÚki-nar-tal-la-aš /kinartallaš/)
- Luwian: *zinar
- → Hattic: 𒄑𒀭𒈹 (giš dingirMÙŠ /zinar/, “lyre”)
- → Sumerian: 𒍝𒈾𒊒 (za-na-ru), 𒄑𒀭𒈹 (giš dingirMÙŠ /zanaru/), 𒈹 (zanaru /zanaru/, literally “Inanna, goddess of courtesans and by association the harp”)
- → Akkadian: 𒍝𒈾𒊒 (za-na-ru), 𒄑...𒊏 (gišÙZ×BALAG-ra /zanaru, zanāru/)[n 1]
- →? Old Armenian: ջնար (ǰnar)[5]
- Hittite: *kinar[4]
- → Proto-Semitic: *kinnār- (see there for further descendants)
Notes
Further reading
- Ivanov, Vjač. Vs. (1985) “Ob otnošenii xattskovo jazyka k severozapadnokavkazskim [Hattic and North Caucasian]”, in B. B. Piotrovskij et al., editors, Drevnjaja Anatolija (in Russian), Moscow: Nauka, page 49 of 26–59
- Kassian, A. (2009) “Hattic as a Sino-Caucasian language”, in Ugarit-Forschungen, volume 41, pages 394–396
References
- Noonan, Benjamin J. (2019) Non-Semitic Loanwords in the Hebrew Bible: A Lexicon of Language Contact (Linguistic Studies in Ancient West Semitic; 14), University Park, Pennsylvania: Eisenbrauns, →ISBN, page 126
- Greenberg, Joseph Harold (1950) “The Patterning of Root Morphemes in Semitic”, in Word, volume 6, number 2, , page 162, point 2
- Vernet i Pons, Eulàlia (2011 March 1) “Semitic Root Incompatibilities and Historical Linguistics”, in Journal of Semitic Studies, volume 56, number 1, , page 4
- Harry A., Hoffner Jr., Melchert, H. Craig (2008) A Grammar of the Hittite Language, volume Part 1: Reference Grammar, Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, page 57
- The template Template:R:xcl:Martirosyan:2019b does not use the parameter(s):
vol=IV
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Martirosyan, Hrach (2019) “Armenian musical instruments: three etymologies”, in Tatevik Shakhkulyan, editor, Komitas Museum-Institute Yearbook, vol. IV, Yerevan: Komitas Museum-Institute, pages 187–189, deriving the Hattic and Armenian from "Mediterranean–Pontic" substrate *gʰindʰara-, a prenasalized form of *gʰidʰara-, whence κιθάρα (kithára)
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