Semites Nations and Origins of their Language.
Semites - Encyclopedia of The Bible - Bible Gateway
Exploring Semitic Meaning in the Bible Context - Bible Angels
Semites are the Hebrew Nations from Adam and Eve that were Taught Beresit Language from the Mouth of Our Heavenly Creator in the Garden of Eden. Then after the Days of NOAH, SHEM, was the One Blessed with The HOLY SPIRIT and was given the Semitic Linguistics and Deep Rich Meaning of Beresit, that continued to Teach His Tribes and some those of the BARUCH/JEPHETH Families of those Mixed with each other's Families. The Semitic Language gone from Beresit, to Aramic, and into today's Hebrew.
- relating to or denoting a family of languages that includes Hebrew, Arabic, and Aramaic and certain ancient languages such as Phoenician and Akkadian, constituting the main subgroup of the Afro-Asiatic family.
- relating to the peoples who speak Semitic languages, especially Hebrew and Arabic
SEMITES. The term “Semite” was used by Johann Gottfried Eichhorn in 1787, in his Introduction to the Old Testament (second ed. 1:15) where he applied it to the peoples whose habitat is Ethiopia, Arabia, Palestine, Phoenicia, Syria, and the countries of the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers. The term was apparently first used by A. L. Schlözer in 1781 to designate the descendants of Shem in the lists of Genesis 10:21ff. The descendants of Shem, however, do not correspond entirely to the Sem.-speaking peoples. Elam e.g., which is included in Genesis 10:22, was not a Sem. speaking people, while the Canaanites, including the Sidonians, who were Sem., are given in Genesis 10:15 among the descendants of Ham. It should be noted, however, that there are certain similarities between Egyp. (Hamitic) and Sem. languages. Perhaps there was a very primitive Semitic-Hamitic community in the vicinity of Arabia and Egypt. Such facts indicate that the table of nations in Genesis 10 was not entirely ethnological, but at least partly geographical.
Although all Semites were at one time polytheistic, it was they who gave birth to the three great monotheistic religions of the world: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
Bibliography S. Moscati, Ancient Semitic Civilizations (1957); An Introduction to the Comparative Grammar of the Semitic Languages (1964).
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