- Source: List of loanwords in Classical Syriac
Loanwords in Classical Syriac Aramaic entered the language throughout different periods in the history of Mesopotamia. The Alexandrian and Seleucid rule along with interaction with their fellow citizens of the Greco-Roman world of the Fertile Crescent resulted in the adoption of numerous Greek words. The majority of these were nouns relating to Roman administration, such as officials, military, and law. The largest group of loanwords come from Greek and is followed by Iranian loans, although words from Sumerian, Akkadian, and Latin are also passed on in varying degrees. Several Hebrew loanwords exist (particularly religious terms). The Islamic Conquests changed the demographics of the empire and resulted in an influx of a new corpus of words from Arabic while life under the Seljuk, Ottoman, and Safavid empires introduced Turkic words to the language.
Language isolates
= Sumerian
=Semitic
= Akkadian
== Arabic
== Hebrew
=Indo-European
= Greek
=Early Greek loans which were administrative in nature became obscure as society changed, although words adopted from translations of Christian and philosophical texts outlived the former and survive to the current day.
= Latin
=Latin loans appear to have been largely transmitted to Syriac via Greek. This is evident based on the Syriac orthography which demonstrates it was borrowed from the Greek form.
= Iranian
=Altaic
= Turkic
=See also
List of loanwords in Assyrian Neo-Aramaic
References
Further reading
Ciancaglini, Claudia A. (2006). "SYRIAC LANGUAGE i. IRANIAN LOANWORDS IN SYRIAC". Encyclopaedia Iranica.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of loanwords in Classical Syriac
- Syriac language
- List of loanwords in Assyrian Neo-Aramaic
- Assyrian people
- Suret language
- List of English words of Semitic origin
- List of loanwords in Malay
- Waw (letter)
- List of English words of Arabic origin (A–B)
- Aramaic