CLDF dataset derived from Kitchen et al.'s "Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of Semitic languages" from 2009
If you use these data please cite
- the original source
Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of Semitic languages identifies an Early Bronze Age origin of Semitic in the Near East. Andrew Kitchen, Christopher Ehret, Shiferaw Assefa, Connie J. Mulligan. Proc. R. Soc. B 2009 -; DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.0408. Published 29 April 2009
- the derived dataset using the DOI of the particular released version you were using
This dataset is licensed under a https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ license
See also http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2009/04/27/rspb.2009.0408
Conceptlists in Concepticon:
Unable to identify original sources for Mɛhri, Jibbali, and Harsusi.
Kitchen et al say:
Wordlists for the Ethiosemitic languages (Amharic, Argobba, Chaha, Gafat, Ge’ez, Geto, Harari, Innemor, Mesmes, Mesqan, Soddo, Tigre, Tigrinya, Walani and Zway) and Ogaden Arabic were drawn from Bender (1971). Wordlists for Moroccan Arabic, South Arabian languages ( Jibbali, Harsusi, Mehri and Soqotri) and extinct non-African Semitic languages (Akkadian, Biblical Aramaic, ancient Hebrew and Ugaritic) were constructed from previously published lexicons (Leslau 1938; Gelb et al. 1956; Sobelman & Harrel 1963; Rabin 1975).
I can't see these three in Leslau, Gelb, Sobelman & Harrel or Rabin or Bender.
- Varieties: 25 (linked to 25 different Glottocodes)
- Concepts: 95 (linked to 95 different Concepticon concept sets)
- Lexemes: 2,288
- Sources: 5
- Synonymy: 1.02
- Cognacy: 2,074 cognates in 663 cognate sets (340 singletons)
- Cognate Diversity: 0.26
Name | GitHub user | Description | Role |
---|---|---|---|
Simon J. Greenhill | @SimonGreenhill | patron | Author |
The following CLDF datasets are available in cldf:
- CLDF Wordlist at cldf/cldf-metadata.json