Indo-Semitic: Difference between revisions

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Indo-Semitic preserves the PSem dual and cases, unlike other Semitic languages. It did weird shifts to other parts of the grammar, though.
Indo-Semitic preserves the PSem dual and cases, unlike other Semitic languages. Notably, it shifted to a more agglutinative and head-final grammar.
 
==Nouns==
==Nouns==
Nouns have two genders, three numbers (the dual was retained from Proto-Semitic), and 8 to 10 cases depending on the dialect. The nominative, accusative and genitive were inherited from Proto-Semitic, and additional cases were formed by suffixing inflected pronouns (for example, ''beetilu'' 'the house (dative)' from ''*bayti-lahu'' 'the house (gen), for it').
Nouns have two genders, three numbers (the dual was retained from Proto-Semitic), and 8 to 10 cases depending on the dialect. The nominative, accusative and genitive were inherited from Proto-Semitic, and additional cases were formed by suffixing inflected pronouns (for example, ''beetilu'' 'the house (dative)' from ''*bayti-lahu'' 'the house (gen), for it').