Social:Punic language

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Short description: Extinct ancient Phoenician language
Punic
Phoenicio-Punic, Carthaginian
Inscription Theatre Leptis Magna Libya.JPG
One of the Tripolitania Punic inscriptions, in both Latin (top) and Punic (bottom) script.
RegionTunisia, coastal parts of Algeria, Morocco, southern Iberia, Balearic islands, Libya, Malta, western Sicily, southern and eastern Sardinia
Era8th century BC to 6th century AD
Afro-Asiatic
Early form
Phoenician alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3xpu
xpu
Glottologpuni1241[1]
neop1239  Neo-Punic[2]

The Punic language, also called Phoenicio-Punic or Carthaginian, is an extinct variety of the Phoenician language, a Canaanite language of the Northwest Semitic branch of the Semitic languages. An offshoot of the Phoenician language of coastal West Asia (modern Lebanon and north western Syria), it was principally spoken on the Mediterranean coast of Northwest Africa, the Iberian peninsula and several Mediterranean islands, such as Malta, Sicily, and Sardinia by the Punic people, or western Phoenicians, throughout classical antiquity, from the 8th century BC to the 6th century AD.[3][4][5][6][7][8]

History

Early history

Punic is considered to have gradually separated from its Phoenician parent around the time that Carthage became the leading Phoenician city under Mago I, but scholarly attempts to delineate the dialects lack precision and generally disagree on the classification.[9]

The Punics stayed in contact with the homeland of Phoenicia until the destruction of Carthage by the Roman Republic in 146 BC. At first, there was not much difference between Phoenician and Punic. Developments in the language before 146 BC are largely hidden from us by the adherence of Carthaginian scribes to a traditional Phoenician orthography, but there are occasional hints that the phonology and grammar of Punic had begun to diverge from Phoenician after the sixth century BC.[10] The clearest evidence for this comes from Motya in western Sicily, but there are also traces of it in sixth-century Carthaginian inscriptions and it is unclear whether these developments began in western Sicily and spread to Africa or vice versa.[11] From the fifth-century BC, a shared set of alphabetic, orthographic, and phonological rules are encountered in Punic inscriptions throughout the western Mediterranean, probably due to Carthaginian influence.[12]

Punic literary works were written in the period before 146 BC. For example, Mago wrote 28 volumes about animal husbandry. The Roman Senate appreciated the works so much that after taking Carthage, they presented them to Berber princes who owned libraries there. Mago's work was translated into Greek by Cassius Dionysius of Utica. A Latin version was probably translated from the Greek version. Further examples of Punic works of literature include the works of Hanno the Navigator, who wrote about his encounters during his naval voyages around what is today Africa and about the settling of new colonies in Iberia, North Africa and the Mediterranean.[13]

Neo-Punic

Neo-Punic refers to the dialect of Punic spoken after the fall of Carthage and after the Roman conquest of the former Punic territories in 146 BC. The dialect differed from the earlier Punic language, as is evident from divergent spelling compared to earlier Punic and by the use of non-Semitic names, mostly of Libyco-Berber or Iberian origin. The difference was due to the dialectal changes that Punic underwent as it spread among the northern Berber peoples.[14] Sallust (86 – 34 BC) claims Punic was "altered by their intermarriages with the Numidians".[15] That account agrees with other evidence found to suggest a North African Berber influence on Punic, such as Libyco-Berber names in the Onomasticon of Eusebius.[ambiguous] Neo-Punic is mostly known from inscriptions, including Lepcis Magna N 19 (= KAI 124; 92 AD).

Around the fourth century AD, Punic was still spoken in what is now northern parts of Tunisia and Algeria, other parts of Northwest Africa, and the Mediterranean. A version of Punic, known as Latino-Punic was written in the Latin alphabet and is known from seventy texts. These texts include the 1st-century Zliten LP1 and the second century Lepcis Magna LP1.[clarification needed] They were even written as late as the 4th century, Bir ed-Dreder LP2. Augustine of Hippo (d. 430) is generally considered the last major ancient writer to have some knowledge of Punic and is considered the "primary source on the survival of [late] Punic". According to him, Punic was still spoken in his region (Northern Africa) in the 5th century, centuries after the fall of Carthage, and there were still people who called themselves "chanani" ("Canaanite") at that time.[14]:4 He wrote around 401:

And if the Punic language is rejected by you, you virtually deny what has been admitted by most learned men, that many things have been wisely preserved from oblivion in books written in the Punic tongue. Nay, you ought even to be ashamed of having been born in the country in which the cradle of this language is still warm.[16]

Besides Augustine, the only proof of Punic-speaking communities at such a late period is a series of trilingual funerary texts found in the Christian catacombs of Sirte, Libya: the gravestones are carved in Ancient Greek, Latin and Punic. It might have even survived the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb, as the geographer al-Bakri describes a people speaking a language that was not Berber, Latin or Coptic in Sirte,[17] where spoken Punic survived well past written use.[18] However, it is likely that Arabization of Punic speakers was facilitated by their language belonging to the same group (both were Semitic languages) as that of the conquerors and so they had many grammatical and lexical similarities.[14]:71

Legacy

The idea that Punic was the origin of Maltese was first raised in 1565.[19] Modern linguistics has proved that Maltese is in fact derived from Arabic, probably Siculo-Arabic specifically, with a large number of loanwords from Italian.[20] However, Punic was indeed spoken on the island of Malta at some point in its history, as evidenced by both the Cippi of Melqart, which is integral to the decipherment of Punic after its extinction, and other inscriptions that were found on the islands. Punic itself, being Canaanite, was more similar to Modern Hebrew than to Arabic.

Today there are a number of common Berber roots that descend from Punic, including the word for "learn" (*almid, *yulmad; compare Hebrew למד).[21]

Description

Punic is known from inscriptions (most of them religious formulae) and personal name evidence. The play Poenulus by Plautus contains a few lines of vernacular Punic which have been subject to some research because unlike inscriptions, they largely preserve the vowels.[22]

Like its Phoenician parent, Punic was written from right to left, in horizontal lines, without vowels.[23]

Phonology

Punic has 22 consonants.[24] Details of their pronunciation can be reconstructed from Punic and Neo-Punic texts written in Latin or Greek characters (inscriptions, and parts of Plautus's comedy Poenulus, 'The Little Punic').[25]

Orthography Name Transliteration Pronunciation Notes
Neo-Punic Phoenician
Aleph Aleph 𐤀 ʾalp later ʾalf ʾ /ʔ/ Sometimes also used for the indication of vowels.
Beth Beth 𐤁 Bēt later Vēt b
v
/b/
/v/
In Late Punic and in Late Phoenician, ⟨b⟩ (/b/) underwent a fricativization to ⟨v⟩ (/v/) in the 3rd century BCE.
Gimel Gimel 𐤂 Gaml g /ɡ/ Some words in Latin transliterations at the end of a word show a spirantization as [ɣ], written indicated by "ẖ" instead of the usual "gh".
Daleth Daleth 𐤃 Dalt d /d/
He He 𐤄 He h /h/ Under Roman influence often elided but was still pronounced in certain Carthaginian words.
Waw Waw 𐤅 Waw w /w/ Sometimes also used for the indication of the vowel "u".
Zayin Zayin 𐤆 Zēn z /z/ In a few names attested as "sd", like in Hasdrubal for "ʿazrubaʿl", "esde" for heze ("this", used in some Punic dialects), but most texts show a simple "s": "syt" for zut ("this", in Late Punic)
Heth Heth 𐤇 Ḥet /ħ/ Sometimes used as a vowel for "a, e, i, o, u", the sound of Het was weakened, and words written usually with it were often instead written with the letter Alf in Late Punic inscriptions.
Teth Teth 𐤈 Ṭet //
Yodh Yodh 𐤉 Yod y /j/ Sometimes also used for the indication of the vowel "i" but mostly in foreign names.
Kaph Kaph 𐤊 Kap k /k/ Some words in Latin transliterations at the end of a word show a spirantization as [x], written indicated by "h" instead of the usual "ch".
Lamedh Lamedh 𐤋 Lamd l /l/
Mem Mem 𐤌 Mēm m /m/
Nun Nun 𐤍 Nūn n /n/
Samekh Samekh 𐤎 Semk s /s/
Ayin Ayin 𐤏 ʿēn ʿ /ʕ/ Often used for the vowel "a" and "o" in late Punic, mostly for foreign Latin names.
Pe Pe 𐤐 Pi later Fi p
f
/p/
/f/
In Late Punic and in Late Phoenician, ⟨p⟩ (/p/) underwent a fricativization to ⟨f⟩ (/f/) in the 3rd century BCE.
Tsadi Sadek 𐤑 Tsade /sˤ/ Attested as "ts" mostly as "s" in Latin and Ancient Greek and Hittite, Lydian and Etruscan texts. Attested in some Latin texts as "st".
Qoph Qoph 𐤒 Qop later Qof q /q/
Res Res 𐤓 Rūš r /r/
Shin Shin 𐤔 Shin š /ʃ/ or /s/ Pronunciation is debated: some[26] think it was /ʃ/; others[27] that at an early time it had become /s/.
Taw Taw 𐤕 Taw t /t/

Table of consonant phonemes

Labial Alveolar Palatal
/ Velar
Uvular /
Pharyngeal
Glottal
plain emphatic
Nasal m n
Stop p~f b~v t d k ɡ q ʔ
Fricative s z ʃ ħ ʕ h
Approximant w l j
Trill r

Vowels

The vowels in Punic and Neo-Punic are: short a, i, and u; their long counterparts ā, ī, and ū; and ē and ō, which had developed out of the diphthongs ay and aw, respectively (for example Punic mēm, 'water', corresponds to Hebrew mayim).

Two vowel changes are noteworthy. In many cases a stressed long ā developed into /o/, for example in the third person masculine singular of the suffixing conjugation of the verb, baròk, 'he has blessed' (compare Hebrew baràk). And in some cases that /o/ secondarily developed into ū, for example , 'what?', < < (cf. Hebrew māh, 'what?').

In late Punic and Neo-Punic the glottal stop and pharyngeal and laryngeal consonants were no longer pronounced. The signs’, ‘, h, and thus became available to indicate vowels. The ‘ayn () came to be regularly used to indicate an /a/ sound, and also y and w increasingly were used to indicate /i/ and /o, u/, respectively. But a consistent system to write vowels never developed.[28]

Grammar

In this section "Grammar"[29] the notation "XX (xxxx)" is used, where XX is the spelling in Punic characters (without vowels), while xxxx is a phonetic rendering, including vowels, as can be reconstructed from Punic language texts written in the Latin or Greek alphabets.

Nouns

Nouns, including adjectives, in Punic and Neo-Punic can be of two genders (masculine or feminine), three numbers (singular, dual, or plural), and in two 'states', the absolute state or the so-called construct state. A word in the construct state has a close relation with the word that follows, a relation that is often translated by "of". For example, in the combination "sons of Hanno", "sons of" would be in the construct state, while "Hanno" would be in the absolute state.

Morphology:

masculine (example) feminine (examples)
Singular absolute state BN (bin), 'son' -T, -’T (-ot, -ut, -īt) BT (bit), 'daughter'
construct state BN (bin), 'son of' BT, B‘T (bit), 'daughter of'
Dual absolute state -M (-ēm) -M (-ēm) [YD, 'hand':] YDM (yadēm), 'two hands'
construct state (-ē) (-ē) [‘YN, ‘N, 'eye':] ‘N (‘ēnē) , '[two] eyes of'
Plural absolute state -M, -’M, -YM (-īm, -ēm) BNM (banīm), 'sons' -T, -’T (-ūt) BNT (banūt), 'daughters'
construct state (-ē) BN’ (benē), 'sons of' BNT (banūt), 'daughters of'

Pronouns

Demonstrative pronoun

The demonstrative pronoun 'this, these' was:[30]

Masculine Feminine
Singular Z, ’Z, (ezdē); Z (ezdō); (Punic) (cf. Hebrew zèh, fem. zōt)
S (si);
ST (sit)
Š’ (sō, sū);
ST (sōt)
(Neo-Punic)
Plural ’L, ’L’ (’llē) (Punic and Neo-Punic) (cf. Hebrew ’ēllèh)
Definite article

The definite article was evolving from Phoenician ha- to an unaspirated article a-. By 406 BCE, both variants were attested in the same inscription (CIS I 5510). Although in later times the h- was no longer pronounced, the "historical" spelling H- kept being used, in addition to ’- and Ø-, and one even finds Ḥ-.[31]

Personal pronoun

The personal pronouns, when used on their own, are:[32] (forms between [...] are attested in Phoenician only)

Singular Plural
masculine feminine (cf. Hebrew:) masculine feminine (cf. Hebrew:)
1st person ’NK, ’NKY (’anīki, ’anīk) = 'I, I myself' ’ānokí [ (’)NḤN ((’a)náḥnu) ] = 'we' ’anáḥnū
2nd person ’T (’átta) [ ’T (’atti) ] = 'you' (singular) ’attā(h); ’at ’TM (’attím) ? = 'you' (plural) ’attèm; ’attēn
3rd person H’ (hū, ū) H’, HY (hī) = 'he, she' hū; hī HMT (hēmat?) = 'they' hēmmā(h); hēnnā(h)

When used as a direct or indirect object ('me, him', 'to me, to him') or as a possessive ('mine, his') the personal pronoun takes the form of a suffix. These suffixes can be combined with verbal forms, substantives, and paricles.

Examples:

ḤN (ḥan) = (verb:) 'he has shown favor' →
ḤN’ (ḥannō) = 'he has shown favor to him (-ō)' = proper name Hanno
ḤNYB‘L (ḥannī ba‘al) = (verb:) 'Ba‘al has shown favor to me (-ī)' = proper name Hannibal
BN (bin) = 'son' →
BN’, BNY (binō) = 'his son'
’T (’et) = 'with' (preposition) →
’TY (’ittī) = 'together with me'

The paradigm for the suffixed personal pronouns is:[33]

Singular Plural
masculine feminine (cf. Hebrew:) masculine feminine (cf. Hebrew:)
1st person (possessive) -Y (-ī) = 'mine' -N (-en, -on) = 'us, our' -nû
(object) -NY (-ni) = 'me' -ni
2nd person -K, -K’ (-ka) -KY, -K (-kī) = '(to) you, your' (singular) -ka; -k -KM (-kom) ? = '(to) you, your' (plural) -kem
3rd person -’, -‘, -‘’ (-o);
-Ø, -Y, -Y’ (-yo)
-’, -‘, -‘’ (-a);
-Y‘ (-ya)
= 'him, his; her' -o; -āh -M (-om); -M (-am) = 'them, their' -ām, -ēm; -ān
-Ø, -Y, -’, -’Y
(-i)
[< -ih(u)]
-Y (-i) -hu; -hā -NM, -N’M, -NHM
(-nom)
-M (-im)

Relative pronoun

The relative pronoun, 'who, that, which', in both Punic and Neo-Punic is’ Š (’īs). In late Neo-Punic M’ () (originally an interrogative pronoun, 'what?') emerged as a second relative pronoun. Both pronouns were not inflected. The combination ’Š M’ (’īs mū) was also used in late Neo-Punic.[34]

Determinative pronoun

A pronoun Š- (si-) was used to express an indirect genitival relationship between two substantives; it can be translated as 'of'. This uninflected pronoun was prefixed to the second of the two substantives.[35] Example:

HKHNT ŠRBTN (ha-kohènet si-Rabat-ēn), 'the priestess of our Lady'

Interrogative pronoun

There are two interrogative pronouns:[36]

MY (mī), 'who?' (cf. Hebrew )
M’ (mū), 'what?' (cf. Hebrew māh). In Neo-Punic this pronoun is also used as a relative pronoun, 'that, which'.[37]

Neither of the two pronouns was inflected.

Indefinite pronoun

In Punic and Neo-Punic there was no exclusive indefinite pronoun. Whenever such a pronoun might be needed, it was circumscribed by means of words like ’ḤD (’ḥḥad), 'one', ’Š (’īs) or ’DM (’adom), 'a man, a person', or KL (kil), 'all'.[38]

Verbs

Morphology

The nucleus of Punic and Neo-Punic verbs is a "root" consisting of three or, sometimes, two consonants. By adding prefixes and suffixes, and by varying the vowels that are inserted into the root, the various forms of the verb are formed. These belong to six "stems" (conjugations). The basic, and most common, stem type is the Qal. The other common stems are:[39]

  • Niph‘al (the usual passive stem);
  • Pi‘el (a so-called intensive stem);
  • Yiph‘il (a causative stem; corresponds to the Hiph‘il stem in Hebrew).

A few other stems are found only very rarely:

  • Qal Passive;
  • Pu‘al (passive of the Pi‘el stem);
  • Yitpe‘el (reflexive variant of the Pi‘el; Hebrew Hitpa‘el).
Qal

The paradigm of the Qal is (the verb B-R-K (barok), 'to bless', is used as an example):

(note 1:) “the verb barok”: barok literally means 'he blesses', it is tradition to consider the 3rd person masculine suffixing form as the standard form of the Punic verb;
(note 2:) Forms between [...] are known from Phoenician but have not yet been attested in Punic.
Form (Neo-)Punic Translation (cf. Hebrew)
Perfect
(Suffixing
form)
Singular 1 BRKT (barakti) = 'I bless' baràkti
2 masc. BRKT (barakta) = 'you (m.) bless' barákta
fem. [ BRKT (barakti) ] = 'you (f.) bless' barákt
3 masc. BRK (barok) = 'he blesses barák
fem. BRK, BRK’, BRK‘ (berka) = 'she blesses' barekāh
Plural 1 BRKN (baraknu) = 'we bless' baràknū
2 masc. BRKTM (biraktim) = 'you (m. pl.) bless' beraktèm
fem. — (not attested) 'you (f.) bless' beraktèn
3 BRK (barkū) = 'they bless' bare
Imperfect
(Prefixing
form A)
and
Iussive
(Prefixing
form B)
Singular 1 ’BRK (’ebrok, ’ibrok) = 'I will bless, let me bless' ’ebròk
2 masc. TBRK (tibrok) = 'you (m.) will bless, may you (m.) bless' tibròk
fem. [ TBRKY (tibrokī) ] = 'you (f.) will bless, may you (f.) bless' tibre
3 masc. YBRK (yibrok) = 'he will bless, may he bless' yibrok
fem. [ TBRK (tibrok) ] = 'she will bless, may she bless' tibròk
Plural 1 NBRK (nibrok) = 'we will bless, let us bless' nibròk
2 masc. TBRKN (tibrakūn) = 'you (m. pl.) will bless' (imperfect) tibre
TBRK (tibrokū) = 'may you (m. pl.) bless' (iussive)
fem. YBRK (yibrok) = 'you (f. pl.) will bless, may you (f.) bless' tibròknāh
3 masc. [ YBRKN (yibrokūn) ] = 'they (m.) will bless' (imperfect) yibre
YBRK (yibrokū) = 'may they (m.) bless' (iussive)
fem. — (not attested) 'they (f.) will bless, may they (f.) bless' tibròknāh
Cohortative
(Prefixing form C)
Singular 1 — (not attested) 'let me bless!' ’ebrekāh
Plural 1 — (not attested) 'let us bless!' nibrekāh
Imperative Singular 2 masc. BRK (borok) = 'bless!, you (man) must bless' berok
fem. [ BRK (birkī) ] = 'bless!, you (woman) must bless' birkī
Plural 2 masc. — (not attested) 'bless!, you (men) must bless' birkū
fem. — (not attested) 'bless!, you (women) must bless' beròknāh
Infinitive Infinitive construct L-BRK (li-brūk) = 'to bless' berok
Infinitive absolute BRK (barōk) = 'bless' barōk
Participle
(active)
Singular masc. BRK (būrek) = '(a man:) blessing' borēk
fem. BRKT (būrekt) = '(a woman:) blessing' borèket, borekāh
Plural masc. BRKM (bōrkīm) = '(men:) blessing' borekīm
fem. — (not attested) '(women:) blessing' borekōt
(passive) Singular masc. — (not attested) '(a man:) blessed' barūk
fem. BRKT (barūkt) = '(a woman:) blessed' berūkāh
Plural masc. BRKM (berūkīm) = '(men:) blessed' berūkīm
fem. — (not attested) '(women:) blessed' berūkōt
Niph‘al

The following Niph‘al forms are attested in Punic and Neo-Punic (verb: P-‘-L, fel, 'to make'; < Phoenician pa‘ol):

Form (Neo-)Punic Translation (cf. Hebrew)
Perfect
(Suffixing
form)
Singular 3 masc. NP‘L (nef‘al) = 'it (m.) is/was made' niph‘al
fem. NP‘L’ (nef‘ala) = 'it (f.) is/was made' niph‘elāh
Plural 3 masc. NP‘L’, NP‘L (nef‘alū) = 'they are/were made' niph‘e
Pi‘el

The following Pi‘el forms are attested in Punic and Neo-Punic (verb: Ḥ-D-Š, ḥados, 'to make new, to restore'):

Form (Neo-)Punic Translation (cf. Hebrew)
Perfect
(Suffixing
form)
Singular 1 ḤDŠTY, ḤDŠT (ḥiddesti) = 'I restore' ḥiddàšti
3 masc. ḤYDŠ, ḤDŠ (ḥiddes) = 'he restores' ḥiddēš
Plural 3 masc. ḤDŠ (ḥiddesū) = 'they restore' ḥiddēšū
Imperfect Singular 3 masc. YḤDŠ (yeḥeddes) = 'he will restore' yeḥaddēš
Imperative Singular 2 masc. ḤDŠ (ḥeddes) = 'restore!' ḥaddēš
Infinitive Infinitive construct L-ḤDŠ (liḥeddes) = 'to restore' ḥaddēš
Participle (active) Singular masc. MḤDŠ (meḥeddes) = 'restoring (man)' meḥaddēš
Plural masc. MḤDŠM (meḥeddesīm) = 'restoring (men)' meḥaddešīm
Yiph‘il

The following Yiph‘il forms are attested in Punic and Neo-Punic (verb: Q-D-Š, qados, 'to dedicate'):

Form (Neo-)Punic Translation (cf. Hebrew Hiph‘il)
Perfect
(Suffixing
form)
Singular 3 masc. ’YQDŠ, YQDŠ (iqdēs) = 'he dedicates, has dedicated' hiqdīš
fem. HQDYŠ‘ (iqdísa) = 'she dedicates, has dedicated' hiqdīšāh
Plural 3 masc. YQDŠ‘ (yiqdísū) = 'they dedicate, have dedicated' hiqdīšū
Imperfect Plural 3 masc. YQDŠN (yiqdisūn) = 'they will dedicate' yaqdišū
Cohortative Singular 1 ’QDŠ (iqdisa) = 'let me dedicate' ’aqdēš, ’aqdešāh
3 masc. YQDŠ(?) (yiqdisa) = 'let him dedicate' yaqdēš
Imperative Singular 2 masc. HQDŠ (iqdes or aqdes) = 'dedicate!' haqdēš
Infinitive Infinitive construct L-QDŠ (l-aqdīs) = 'to dedicate' haqdīš
Infinitive absolute YQDŠ (yeqdes) = '(to) dedicate' haqdēš
Participle (active) Singular masc. MYQDŠ, MQDŠ (miqdīs) = 'dedicating (man)' maqdīš
Weak verbs

Many (Neo-)Punic verbs are "weak": depending on the specific root consonants certain deviations of the standard verbal paradigm occur. For example in the group I-n (verbs with first consonant N-) the n may disappear through assimilation. Summary:

Group Example Phenomena
I-n (or פ״ן) N-D-R (nador), 'to vow' N- can disappear through assimilation
I-y (פ״וי) Y-T-N (yaton), 'to give' Yiph‘il > yūph‘il
III-y (ל״ה) B-N-Y (bano), 'to build' -Y can disappear
II-gem (ע״ע) Ḥ-N-N (ḥan), 'to show favor' second and third root consonant are the same ("geminated")
II-wy (ע״וי) K-N (kōn), 'to be' two-consonant root; Pi‘el > polel

Form and use

In Punic there was no one-on-one correlation between form and use. For example, the suffix form (perfect) is often translated by a present tense, but it may also refer to the past or future. Tense, aspect, and mood of verbal forms were determined by syntax, not by morphology.[40]

The tense, aspect and mood of a given verbal form may depend on:

  1. whether the form is part of the main clause, or of a subordinate clause;
  2. if in a subordinate clause, it may depend on the type of subordinate clause (for example, conditional, or temporal);
  3. word order may be important: does the verbal form precede or follow the subject of the clause?;
  4. it also may depend on a verbal form earlier in the same clause: suffix forms or an infinitive absolute used consecutive to another verbal form, take the same tense, aspect and mood as the preceding form.

Numbers

The numbers from one to ten are:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
(masculine form) ’ḤD
(’eḥḥad)
ŠNM
(snēm)
ŠLŠ, Š‛LŠ
(salūs)
’RB‛
(’arba‛)
ḤMŠ
(ḥames)
ŠŠ, Š’Š
(ses)
ŠB‛
(séba‛)
ŠMN, ŠMN’
(samūne)
TŠ‛
(tésa‛)
‛ŠR, ‛Š‛R, ‛SR
(‛asar)
(feminine form) ’ḤT
(’eḥḥat)
ŠTM
(stēm)
ŠLŠT
(salūst)
’RB‛T
(’arbá‛at)
ḤMŠT
(ḥamist)
ŠŠT
(sésit)
ŠB‛T
(sebá‛at)
ŠMNT
(samūnīt)
TŠ‛T
(tisá‛at)
‛ŠRT
(‛asert)
(cf. Hebrew, masc.) ’eḥād šenáyim šalóš ’arbá‛ ḥamēš šēš šèba‛ šemonèh tēša‛ ‛èśer

Punic and Neo-Punic take part in the so-called "Semitic polarity": the numbers 3-10 take the feminine form with masculine nouns, and vice versa. Thus with masculine BN (bin, 'son') or YM (yom, 'day'), numbers take the feminine form ending in -T, while with feminine ŠT (sat, 'year'), they take the masculine form without -T.[41] For example:

‛W’ Š‛NT ‛SR WŠ‛LŠ (ḥawa’ sanūt ‛asar w-salūs):
'He lived (verb Ḥ-W-Y, 'to live') thirteen years' (KAI 144)

Multiples of ten take the form of a plural (-īm) of the word for 10 or 3-9:

20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
(both masc. and fem.) ‛SRM, HŠRM
(‛esrīm)
ŠLŠM
(salūsīm)
’RB‛M, ’RBM
(’arba‛īm, ’arbīm)
ḤMŠM, ‛MŠM
(ḥamissīm)
ŠŠM, ŠYŠM
(sissīm)
ŠB‛M
(sib‛īm)
ŠMNM’
(samūnīm)
TŠM, ṬYŠM
(tissīm)

One hundred is M’T (mīt), its dual M’TM (mitēm) is 200; 1000 is ’LP (’èlef), and 10,000 is RB’ (ribō).

Particles

An important particle is the so-called nota objecti, or accusative particle, ’YT (’et) (rarely ’T; usually T- before a substantive with definite article or with demonstrative pronoun). It is placed before a substantive and indicates that that substantive is an object in the sentence (mostly a direct object).[42]

Syntax

Word order in Punic and Neo-Punic can vary, but this variation has its grammatical limits. For example, in a clause with an imperfect prefixing form the subject can either precede or follow the verb. However, as a rule, if the verb precedes it refers to the present, while if the subject precedes, the verb refers to the future.[43]

The repertoire of possible ways in (Neo-)Punic to express a certain combination of tense, aspect, and mood seems to be more restricted than in Phoenician, but at the same time the rules seem to have become less strict.

Example

Act V of Plautus's comedy Poenulus opens with Hanno speaking in Punic, his native language, in the first ten lines. Then follows a slightly different version of the same lines. Charles Krahmalkov is of the opinion that the first ten lines are Neo-Punic, the next ten Punic.[44][45]

Krahmalkov proposed the theory that Plautus, who often translated Greek comedies into Latin, in this case too reworked a Greek original, the Karkhedonios ('The Carthaginian'; Athenian comic poet Alexis wrote a play with this title). In this case, there probably also existed a Punic translation of the Greek comedy, and Plautus took parts of this Punic version to give his Carthaginian character authentic speech. Moreover, in this way he could enter puns by introducing in his play would-be translators who, to comical effect, claimed to, but did not in fact, understand Punic, and thus gave nonsensical 'translations'.[46]

Hanno's Punic speech

First version (Neo-Punic) Second version (the "unknown text"; Punic)

Yth alonim ualonuth sicorathi symacom syth 930
chy mlachthi in ythmum ysthyalm ych-ibarcu mysehi
li pho caneth yth bynuthi uad edin byn ui
bymarob syllohom alonim ubymysyrthohom
byth limmoth ynnocho thuulech-antidamas chon
ys sidobrim chi fel yth chyl is chon chen liful 935
yth binim ys dybur ch-innocho-tnu agorastocles
yth emanethi hy chirs aelichot sithi nasot
bynu yid ch-illuch ily gubulim lasibithim
bodi aly thera ynnynu yslym min cho-th iusim

Yth alonim ualoniuth sicorathii sthymhimi hymacom syth 940
combaepumamitalmetlotiambeat
iulecantheconaalonimbalumbar dechor
bats . . . . hunesobinesubicsillimbalim
esseantidamossonalemuedubertefet
donobun.hun ec cil thumucommucroluful 945
altanimauosduberithemhuarcharistolem
sitt esed anec naso ters ahelicot
alemu [y]s duber timur mucop[m] suistiti
aoccaaneclictorbod es iussilim limmim colus

Plautus (or a later redactor[47]) next provided a Latin translation of the preceding lines:[48]

Latin and English translation

Latin English

deos deasque veneror, qui hanc urbem colunt, 950
ut quod de mea re huc veni rite venerim,
measque hic ut gnatas et mei fratris filium
reperire me siritis, di vostram fidem.
[quae mihi surruptae sunt et fratris filium.]
sed hic mihi antehac hospes Antidamas fuit; 955
eum fecisse aiunt, sibi quod faciundum fuit.
eius filium esse hic praedicant Agorastoclem:
ad eum hospitalem hanc tesseram mecum fero;
is in hisce habitare monstratust regionibus.
hos percontabor qui hinc egrediuntur foras.
[49]

I worship the gods and goddesses who preside over this city,
that I may have come hither with good omen as to this business of mine, on which I have come;
and, to find my daughters and the son of my cousin,
lend me your aid, ye gods, that you may permit me
those who were stolen away from me, and his son from my cousin.
But here lived formerly my guest Antidamas.
They say that he has done that which he was doomed to do.
They say that his son Agorastocles lives here.
To him am I carrying with me this token of hospitality.
He has been pointed as living in this neighbourhood.
I'll make enquiry of these who are coming hither out of doors.[48]

Comments

As a Latin transliteration, the text as recorded necessarily departs from the original Punic speech. Lines 930-939 have only survived in one manuscript, the "Ambrosianus" A (the "Ambrosian Palimpsest"). The "unknown" text, lines 940-949, has also survived in three manuscripts of the Palatine family (P). The several manuscript sources show many differences among them, with the P scripts showing some words being split out and some mis-interpretations.[50][51] The "unknown" text used here is from the Ambrosianus A; both families have lost small chunks of text over time. Recently efforts have been made to, among other things, fill in the redactions in the "unknown language" part and to properly split the morphemes. The close mirroring between lines 930-931/940 and lines 937/947 (underlined above) suggests that the "unknown language" text (lines 940-949) is also Punic. Gratwick and Krahmalkov conclude that the more corrupted "unknown" form (940-949) is earlier (basically Plautus's own text in Punic), while lines 930-939 reflect a “late 'scholar's repair'” from Late Antiquity in Neo-Punic.[47][52][53]

Some Punic phrases known in the text include:

  • 930/940: Yth alonim ualoniuth sicorathii (sthymhimi) hymacom syth = ’T ’LNM W-’LNT ZKRT (Š-QRYT?; [940:] ŠTMḤW?) H-MQM ST.
- yth = ’et, accusative particle (nota objecti): indicates that an object follows (cf. Hebrew ’et)
- alonim = ’alonīm: plural masculine of ’alōn: 'gods' (cf. Hebrew ’elōah, 'god, goddess', plural ’elohîm); = Latin deōs; cf. alonim in 933 ~ di ('gods') in 953
- u- = w-, 'and' (Hebrew w-); = Latin -que
- aloniuth = ’alonōt: plural feminine of ’alōn: 'goddesses (of)'; = Latin deās
- sicorathi: corresponds with Hebrew zakàrti, 'I have been mindful of, I remember, I keep holy'; = Latin veneror (note: s in sicorathi ~ z in zakàrti: in late Punic the four Phoenician sibilants, s, š, ș, and z, were all pronounced /s/);[54] also interpreted as si-qart, '(of) this city', but that is less probable because then a verb is missing in the sentence, and it would make hymacom syth, 'this city', superfluous.
- hymacom: ha-maqōm, definite article + 'place, city' (Hebrew hammaqōm); = Latin urbem ('city'). Note: variant symacom syth (line 930) = šè + maqōm syth, 'of this city'. mucom in 948 is also maqōm.[47]
- syth: demonstrative pronoun 'this', singular feminine (Hebrew: zōt) or masculine (Hebrew: zèh) = Latin hanc (in Hebrew maqōm, 'place, city', usually is a masculine word, but occasionally it can be feminine). In 940P esse is the Plautine Punic spelling, 930 and 940A have the late Neo-Punic spelling syth.[47]
  • 937/947: yth emanethi hy chirs aelichot / sitt esed anec naso ters ahelicot = ’T-M ’NKY H’ ḤRŠ (YŠ) H-HLYKT / Š-’TY ’Z ’NK NŠ’ ḤRŠ H-HLYKT.
- yth = ’et: probably the accusative particle again, here indicating an indirect object ('for', 'to'; = Latin ad); or it may be the preposition ’et, 'with' (cf. Latin mecum, 'with me')
- esed = zdè: demonstrative pronoun, singular masculine, 'this, this one' (Hebrew: zèh); = Latin eum ('him'). In 947P ese the original Plautine Punic spelling has been preserved.[47]
- anec: personal pronoun 1st person, 'I, I myself' (Hebrew anoki) (emanethi in 937 is a corrupt spelling, read (-em) anethi, with ch misread as th, and anechi = 'I, I myself')
- naso = našō’: infinitive absolute of the verb N-Š-’, 'to carry, bring': 'I bring' (Hebrew N-Ś-’, 'to lift, bear, carry'); = Latin fero, 'I bring' (in Punic an infinitive absolute, if consecutive to the main verb, represents the same tense, aspect, person, number and gender as the main verb, in this case a first person singular, cf. anec)[55]
- chirs / (ters): substantive, construct state, 'potsherd of' (Hebrew ḥèreś, 'pottery, potsherd'); = Latin tesseram, 'tile'
- aelichot / ahelicot = ha-helikōt: definite article + substantive plural, 'the hospitality, the guest-friendship' (cf. Hebrew hēlèk, 'visitor'); = Latin hospitalem (a «tessera hospitalis» was an object a guest presented to be recognized)
  • duber, dubyr in 936, 946, 948: Semitic root D-B-R, 'to speak, word'[52]
  • fel, 'he did' (935), li-ful (935) and lu-ful (945), 'to do' (infinitive construct): Semitic root P-‘-L, 'to make, to do'.[47]

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Punic". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/puni1241. 
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Neo-Punic". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/neop1239. 
  3. Moscati, Sabatino (2001) (in en). The Phoenicians. I.B.Tauris. pp. 200. ISBN 9781850435334. https://books.google.com/books?id=1EEtmT9Tbj4C&pg=PA200. 
  4. Palma, Salvatore Di (2014-11-18) (in fr). L'Histoire des marques depuis l'antiquité jusqu'au moyen âge. Société des Ecrivains. pp. 139. ISBN 9782342031201. https://books.google.com/books?id=FFKPBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA139. 
  5. Jouhaud, Edmond Jules René (1968) (in fr). Historie de l'Afrique du Nord. Éditions des Deux Cogs d’Or. pp. 22. https://books.google.com/books?id=RJIFAQAAIAAJ. 
  6. Camps, Gabriel (1992) (in fr). L'Afrique du Nord au féminin. Perrin (réédition numérique FeniXX). pp. 45. ISBN 9782262057435. https://books.google.com/books?id=a8dXDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT45. 
  7. Temporini, Hildegard, ed (1975) (in fr). Politische Geschichte (Provinzen und Randvölker: Allgemeines; Britannien, Hispanien, Gallien). Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. pp. 664. ISBN 9783110882070. https://books.google.com/books?id=BuV8DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA664. 
  8. Caruana, A. A. (1852) (in en). Report on the Phœnician and Roman Antiquities in the Group of the Islands of Malta. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 50. https://books.google.com/books?id=M8oNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA50. 
  9. Guzzo, Maria Giulia Amadasi (2014). "Punic Scripts". in Jo Ann Hackett and Walter Emanuel Aufrecht. "An Eye for Form": Epigraphic Essays in Honor of Frank Moore Cross. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-303-4. https://www.academia.edu/37534317. "The place to begin is with a definition of what can be called a Punic script in relation to a Punic language. Conventionally, we call “Punic” the writing typical of Carthage, which spread to other colonies when the “New City” became the “capital” of the Phoenician west. Judging from the existing data on the history of the region, Carthage became leader of the other colonies around the middle to the end of the 6th century BC, when we first know of symbola with the Etruscan cities, the first treaty with Rome (ca. 509 BC), and the first Carthaginian involvement in wars in Sardinia and Sicily. One can suppose that, before this period, the Phoenician language, written according to Phoenician orthographic and paleographic conventions, was still in use in the west, with some local changes in the scripts from region to region or from city to city… As for language, the Phoenician-Punic grammars (the authors of which generally do not agree on the classification of the different phases and dialects of Phoenician) make a distinction between Phoenician and Punic. They lack precision, however, when they attempt to define the characteristics of Punic and the period in which it originated… We are able to distinguish Punic from Phoenician (in part) because of the orthography of the written language. The first linguistic characteristic we can recognize is the tendency to drop the pronunciation of the laryngeal ʾalep, followed by he (in Punic), and finally, the whole series of laryngeals and pharyngeals (in late Punic)." 
  10. Amadasi Guzzo 2012, p. 126.
  11. Amadasi Guzzo 2012, p. 130.
  12. Amadasi Guzzo 2012, pp. 129-130.
  13. Rollin, Charles, Ancient Carthage, http://history-world.org/Carthage,%20A%20History%201.htm, retrieved 2014-06-18 
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Jongeling, Karel; Kerr, Robert M. (2005). Late Punic Epigraphy: An Introduction to the Study of Neo-Punic and Latino-Punic Inscriptions. Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3-1614-8728-6. https://books.google.com/books?id=oYWnSUaslXYC&q=neo-punic&pg=PP1. 
  15. Sall. Iug. 78
  16. Augustine of Hippo, Monteverde, Franco, ed., "Epistola 17", Sant'Agostino — Nuova Biblioteca Agostiniana, http://www.augustinus.it/latino/lettere/lettera_017_testo.htm 
  17. Dunn, Michael Collins (2013-07-30). "Did Punic Survive Until the Advent of Arabic? Part 4: The Post-Augustine Evidence". http://mideasti.blogspot.com/2013/07/did-punic-survive-until-advent-of_30.html. 
  18. Jongeling, Karel. "Latino-Punic texts from North Africa". Dept of Comparative Linguistics, Leiden University. http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/vtw/jongeling/latpun/LPINTRO.htm. 
  19. Cassar, Mario. "L-Istorja tal-Ilsien Malti" (in mt). Akkademja tal-Malti. http://www.akkademjatalmalti.com/page.asp?p=9023. 
  20. Vella, Alexandra (2004). "Language contact and Maltese intonation: Some parallels with other language varieties". Aspects of Multilingualism in European Language History. Hamburg Studies on Multiculturalism. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 263. ISBN 978-90-272-1922-0. https://archive.org/details/aspectsmultiling00brau. 
  21. Blažek, Václav (2014), "Phoenician/Punic Loans in Berber Languages and Their Role in Chronology of Berber" , Folia Orientalia, Vol. 51, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
  22. Sznycer, Maurice (1967). Les passages puniques en transcription latine dans le Poenulus de Plaute. Paris: Librairie C. Klincksieck. 
  23. "Punic". Omniglot. http://www.omniglot.com/writing/punic.htm. 
  24. Segert, Stanislav (1976). A Grammar of Phoenician and Punic. Munich: Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-00724-8. 
  25. Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001). A Phoenician-Punic Grammar (Handbuch der Orientalistik, Vol. 54). Leiden: Brill. pp. 19–37. ISBN 978-1-62837-031-7. (reprint Atlata: SBL, 2014).
  26. For example Harris, Zellig S. (1936). A Grammar of the Phoenician Language. New Haven, Conn.: American Oriental Society. p. 22. ISBN 0-940490-08-0. 
  27. For example Krahmalkov (2001), p. 25-26.
  28. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 19, 27-37.
  29. Based on Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001). A Phoenician-Punic Grammar (Handbuch der Orientalistik, Vol. 54). Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-1-62837-031-7.  (reprint Atlanta, SBL, 2014).
  30. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 75-85.
  31. Krahmalkov (2001), p. 85-92.
  32. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 38-49.
  33. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 50-74.
  34. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 93-103, 110-111.
  35. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 103-107.
  36. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 108-111.
  37. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 110-111.
  38. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 115-119.
  39. For a full discussion of verbal morphology, see: Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 151-214.
  40. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 151-214, 290-298 (especially 151-154).
  41. The discussion by Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 215-226, is confusing because he is unclear about the Semitic polarity.
  42. Krahmalkov (2001), pp. 281-285.
  43. Krahmalkov (2001) pp. 183-185.
  44. Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001). A Phoenician-Punic Grammar. Leiden: Brill.  (reprinted Atlanta, SBL, 2014). For example p. 21 (on line 937 vs. line 947), and often.
  45. Others have thought the language of lines 940-949 (italicized) may be Hebrew, or Libyc, one of the Berber languages. However, Libyc is a very different language, and Plautus certainly did not assume Hanno to be a Jew.
  46. Krahmalkov (2001, 2014), pp. 3-5, 24.
  47. 47.0 47.1 47.2 47.3 47.4 47.5 Krahmalkov, Charles R. (1988). "Observations on the Punic Monologues of Hanno in the "Poenulus"". Orientalia 57 (1): 55–66. ISSN 0030-5367. 
  48. 48.0 48.1 Riley, Henry Thomas. "The Comedies of Plautus". Perseus Digital Library, Tufts University. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0106%3Aact%3D5%3Ascene%3D1. 
  49. Plautus. "Poenulus". The Latin Library. http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/plautus/poenulus.shtml. 
  50. Geppert, C.E. (1864). M. Acci Plauti Poenulus. Cum variis lectionibus Codicis Ambrosiani, Decurtati et Parisini, in usum lectionum. Berlin: Trowitzschii. pp. 58–59. https://books.google.com/books?id=Gf89AAAAcAAJ. 
  51. Schröder, Paul (1869) (in de). Die phönizische Sprache: Entwurf einer Grammatik nebst Sprach- und Schriftproben : mit einem Anhang enthaltend eine Erklärung der punischen Stellen im Pönulus des Plautus. Verlag der Buchhandlung des Waisenhauses. p. 287. https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_oOs0udEemcoC. 
  52. 52.0 52.1 Gratwick, A. S. (1971). "Hanno's Punic Speech in the Poenulus of Plautus". Hermes 99 (1): 25–45. ISSN 0018-0777. 
  53. Rosół, Rafał (2012). "Zum Monolog des Hanno im plautinischen "Poenulus" (V. 930-960)". Hermes 140 (1): 89–95. doi:10.25162/hermes-2012-0006. https://www.academia.edu/7645907. 
  54. Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2014). A Phoenician-Punic Grammar. Leiden, Atlanta: Brill, SBL. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-1-62837-031-7. 
  55. Krahmalkov (2014), p. 210.

Further reading

  • Amadasi Guzzo, Maria Giulia (2012). "Phoenician and Punic in Sicily". in Tribulato, Olga. Language and Linguistic Contact in Ancient Sicily. Cambridge University Press. pp. 115–131. ISBN 978-1-107-02931-6. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/language-and-linguistic-contact-in-ancient-sicily/9AD7D3D652E2EF24F7139D65CB7469A9. 
  • Hoftijzer, Jacob, and Karel Jongeling. 1985. Dictionary of the north-west Semitic inscriptions. With appendices by R. C. Steiner, A. Mosak-Moshavi, and B. Porten. 2 vols. Handbuch der Orienatlistik, Erste Abteilung: Der Nahe und Mittlere Osten 2. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.
  • Jongeling, K. 2008. Handbook of Neo-Punic Inscriptions. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
  • Jongeling, K., and Robert M Kerr. 2005. Late Punic Epigraphy: An Introduction to the Study of Neo-Punic and Latino-Punic Inscriptions. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
  • Kerr, Robert M. 2010. Latino-Punic Epigraphy: A Descriptive Study of the Inscriptions. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
  • Krahmalkov, Charles. 1970. "Studies in Phoenician and Punic Grammar." Journal of Semitic Studies 15, no.2: 181–88.
  • --. 2000. Phoenician-Punic dictionary. Studia Phoenicia 15. Leuven, Belgium: Peeters.
  • --. 2001. A Phoenician-Punic grammar. Handbook of Oriental Studies: Section One, the Near East and the Middle East 54. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.
  • Schmitz, Philip C. "Phoenician-Punic Grammar and Lexicography in the New Millennium." Journal of the American Oriental Society 124, no. 3 (2004): 533-47. doi:10.2307/4132279.
  • Segert, Stanislav. 1976. A Grammar of Phoenician and Punic. München: C.H. Beck.
  • --. 2003. "Phoenician-punic: Grammar and dictionary." Archiv Orientální 71. no. 4: 551–56.
  • Tomback, Richard S. 1978. A comparative Semitic lexicon of the Phoenician and Punic languages. Missoula, MT: Scholars.

External links