Segolate
Appearance
Segolates are words in the Hebrew language that end with the consonant-vowel structure CVCVC, where the penultimate vowel receives syllable stress. Such words are called "segolates" because the final unstressed vowel is typically (but not always) segol. These words evolved from older Canaanite and Semitic words that ended with two consonants; indeed, when a suffix (other than an absolute plural) is added to a segolate, the final vowel vanishes, and the penultimate vowel undergoes compensatory shortening.
In Hebrew
*Ancient | Tiberian | Stem | Meaning | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
*ʾarṥ | אֶרֶץ/אָרֶץ | ʾéreṣ/ʾāreṣ | אַרְצ- | ʾarṣ- | earth; land |
*ʾurn | אֹרֶן | ʾōren | אָרְנ- | ʾorn- | pine tree |
*yayn | יַיִן/יָיִן | yáyin/yāyin | יֵינ- | yên- | wine |
*malḥ | מֶלַח/מָלַח | mélaḥ/mālaḥ | מַלְח- | malḥ- | salt |
*malk | מֶלֶך/מָלֶך | méleḵ/māleḵ | מַלְכּ- | malk- | king |
*kalb | כֶּלֶב/כָּלֶב | kéleḇ/kāleḇ | כַּלְבּ- | kalb- | dog |
*ʿIbr | עֵבֶר | ʿĒḇer | עִבְר- | ʿIḇr- | Eber |
*ʿayn | עַיִן/עָיִן | ʿáyin/ʿāyin | עֵינ- | ʿên- | eye |
In Levantine Arabic
The Arabic language still permits words to end with two consonants, but Levantine Arabic does not. The Levantine dialects insert a final unstressed vowel in a similar manner as Hebrew segolates.
Standard | Levantine | Meaning | |
---|---|---|---|
بئر السبع | Biʾr as-Sabʿ | Bíʾir as-Sábaʿ | Beersheba |
دمشق | Dimašq | Dimášaʾ | Damascus |
طول كرم | Ṭul Karm | Ṭul Kárem | Tulkarm |
القدس | al-Quds | al-ʾÚdus | Jerusalem |