102 holger gzella
indeed be accepted,98 the word in question may simply be a lexical loan.
nothing points to a functional opposition between a productive nstem
and other mediopassive categories in Samʾalian.
4.5 Irregular Verbs
phonetic peculiarities of various classes of verbal roots cause a number
of deviations from the sound paradigm. evidence from later aramaic pro
vides some clues for the situation in the corpus under review here, but
once again, the limited amount of material leaves many questions unan
swered.99
- Verbs with rootinitial /n/ and lqḥ ‘to take’: in later aramaic, these
roots normally assimilate /n/ and /l/ to the following consonant in the
“imperfect” and infinitive. as a consequence, the imperative is formed
on a biradical base (i.e., /qaḥ/ ‘take!’). nonassimilated forms of lqḥ
also occur, especially in tell fekheriye, hence the form of the impera
tive in old aramaic remains unclear. a more detailed discussion of
this phenomenon can be found in the section on phonology. - Verbs with rootinitial /y/ are generally thought to drop the /y/ in
the “imperfect” (as in classical arabic) and subsequently lengthen
the second root consonant instead, but the origin of this compensa
tory lengthening is difficult to pinpoint before the 6th century B.c.100
hence it is hard to say whether yšb ‘he sits’ (Kai 224: 17, from yθb) is
still vocalized as /yaθeb/ or already as /yaθθeb/.101 the imperative, at
any rate, is based on the second and third root consonants, i.e., šbw
/θebū/ ‘dwell!’ (Kai 224: 7). in the cstem, the original rootinitial /w/
(which has shifted to /y/ in northwest Semitic) reappears: hwšbny
/hawθebánī/ ‘he placed me’ (Kai 216: 5) from wθb as opposed to
yhynqn /yahayneqn(ā)/ ‘may they suckle’ (Kai 222 a: 22 and else
where) from *ynq. - Verbs with a long (“geminate”) second root consonant lengthen the
first root consonant in forms with preformatives or prefixes ending in
a vowel: ʿll /ʿālel/ ‘entering’ (Kai 222 a: 6, participle from ʿll) but yʿl
98 hoftijzer – Jongeling 1995: 410 have summarized other proposals.
99 See especially folmer 2011: 151–157 for a balanced survey of the evidence.
100 Beyer 1984: 149f.
101 note that a form like yēṭaḇ ‘it pleases’ in Biblical aramaic (ezra 7: 18) may also pre
serve a reflex of the root consonant /y/ if it indeed derives from */yayṭab/. no such forms
are attested in the epigraphic corpus of old and official aramaic, though.