< Reconstruction:Proto-West Semitic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Semitic/pataw-
Proto-West Semitic
Etymology
From a biconsonantal root extended by reduplication in Proto-West Semitic *patat- (“to make disintegrate, to cut piecemeal”) (Arabic ف ت ت (f t t)), however also seen in Proto-Semitic *pataḥ- (“to open”), *pataq- (“to tear up”) reconstructable from Akkadian.
Verb
*pataw-
Descendants
- Central Semitic:
- ⇒ Arabic: فَتًى (fatan, “youngster”)
- Northwest Semitic:
- Aramaic:
- Palestinian and Classical Syriac: ܦܬܝ (“to enlarge, to open wide”, paʿʿel)
- Canaanite:
- Hebrew: פִּתָּה (pitá, pittā, “to entice, to seduce”, piʿʿel), פֶתִי (p'tí, pəṯī, “dupe; gullible person”)
- → Jewish Literary Aramaic, Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: פתי (“to entice, to seduce”, paʿʿel)
- Hebrew: פִּתָּה (pitá, pittā, “to entice, to seduce”, piʿʿel), פֶתִי (p'tí, pəṯī, “dupe; gullible person”)
- Ugaritic: 𐎔𐎚𐎊 (pty, “to seduce; to copulate”)
- Aramaic:
- ⇒ Safaitic: 𐪐𐪉𐪚 (fty /patay/, “slave”)
- Ethiopian Semitic:
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