language: oar

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has URIhttp://lexvo.org/id/term/language/oar
has glosseng: Fitzmyer proposes recognizing five phases in the development of Aramaic. 1. Old Aramaic - from ca. 925 to 700 B.C. (includes numerous small inscriptions + Sefire)
has glosseng: The oldest version of the Aramaic language. Inscriptions found in Syria. Standard Syrian or Western is the name used for inscriptions from c. 850 - 700 BC found in the vicinity of Aleppo in Syria. Fakhariya is used to describe the dialect found in a single inscription on the upper Habur. Mesopotamian refers to brief texts found on clay tables in Iraq, and shows Akkadian influence. Samalian is the name used for the idiosyncratic dialect used at Zincirli in Turkey in ten inscriptions of Bar-Rakkab, King of Sam'al, the Neo-Hittite kingdom also called Ya'udi. These are the earliest texts found in an Old Aramaic dialect, and date from the second half of the 8th century B.C. 10-8th cent. BC.
lexicalizationeng: Ancient Aramaic language
lexicalizationeng: Ancient Aramaic
lexicalizationeng: Old Aramaic language
subclass ofhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Aramaic_language
subclass ofhttp://www.mpii.de/yago/resource/Aramaic_language
subclass of(noun) an alphabetical (or perhaps syllabic) script used since the 9th century BC to write the Aramaic language; many other scripts were subsequently derived from it
Aramaic script, Aramaic
subclass ofe/Northwest Semitic languages
instance ofhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Aramaic_languages
instance ofhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Northwest_Semitic_languages
instance ofhttp://www.mpii.de/yago/resource/Aramaic_languages
instance ofhttp://www.mpii.de/yago/resource/Northwest_Semitic_languages

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