Katana VentraIP

Semitic root

The roots of verbs and most nouns in the Semitic languages are characterized as a sequence of consonants or "radicals" (hence the term consonantal root). Such abstract consonantal roots are used in the formation of actual words by adding the vowels and non-root consonants (or "transfixes") which go with a particular morphological category around the root consonants, in an appropriate way, generally following specific patterns. It is a peculiarity of Semitic linguistics that a large majority of these consonantal roots are triliterals (although there are a number of quadriliterals, and in some languages also biliterals).

Such roots are also common in other Afroasiatic languages. While Berber mostly has triconsonantal roots, Chadic, Omotic, and Cushitic have mostly biconsonantal roots,[1] and Egyptian shows a mix of biconsonantal and triconsonantal roots.[2]

נַשְׁפְּרִיץ Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine (/naʃˈprit͡s/) – "we will sprinkle" or "we will splash", from Yiddish spritz (from German spritzen)

[1]

Apophony

Arabic grammar

Broken plural

Indo-European ablaut

Khuzdul

K-T-B

Modern Hebrew grammar

Nonconcatenative morphology

Phono-semantic matching

Proto-Indo-European root

Š-L-M

Transfix

Agmon, Noam (2010), (PDF), Brill's Annual of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics, 2: 23–79, doi:10.1163/187666310X12688137960669, archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-11-13, retrieved 2019-09-03

"Materials and Language: Pre-Semitic Root Structure Change Concomitant with Transition to Agriculture"

Semitic Roots Repository

Roots in Quranic Arabic

Project Root List

Learn Hebrew Verbs

Alexis Amid Neme and Eric Laporte (2013), Pattern-and-root inflectional morphology: the Arabic broken plural |year=

Alexis Amid Neme and Eric Laporte (2015), Do computer scientists deeply understand Arabic morphology? – هل يفهم المهندسون الحاسوبيّون علم الصرف فهماً عميقاً؟, available also in Arabic, Indonesian, French