Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic/šidṯ-
Proto-Semitic
Etymology
From Proto-Afroasiatic. Compare Proto-Berber *săḍis (whence Central Atlas Tamazight ⵙⴹⵉⵙ (sḍis)), Egyptian sjsw and Hausa shidà.
Possibly related with Proto-Indo-European *swéḱs, but most likely not.
Numeral
| ← 5 | 6 | 7 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: *šidṯ- | ||
*šidṯ-
Usage notes
This number exhibited chiastic concord (gender polarity), in which masculine forms were used to agree with feminine nouns, and feminine forms with masculine nouns.
Inflection
| m | f | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | *šidṯum | *šidṯatum |
| accusative | *šidṯam | *šidṯatam |
| genitive | *šidṯim | *šidṯatim |
Derived terms
*šidṯ-um (nominative absolute)
- East Semitic:
- Akkadian: 𒐋 f (šeššum)
- West Semitic:
*šidṯ-at-um (nominative absolute with *-at- suffix)
- East Semitic:
- Akkadian: 𒐋 m (šedištum)
- West Semitic:
- Central Semitic:
- Arabic: سِتَّة m (sitta)
- Dadanitic: 𐪊𐪉𐪉 (s¹tt)
- Northwest Semitic: *šiṯṯatum
- Ethiopian Semitic:
- Central Semitic:
References
- Huehnergard, John (2019) “Proto-Semitic”, in Huehnergard, John and Na'ama Pat-El, editors, The Semitic Languages, 2nd edition, Routledge, →ISBN, page 61