Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ptsldigital.ukm.my/jspui/handle/123456789/772778
Title: Reste arabischen heidentums
Authors: J. Wellhausen
Keywords: Semitic language
Theophoric
Issue Date: 1927
Description: In the older Semitic languages, the theophoric names of persons and genders are often formal sentences in which the deity is the subject: God gave, God hears, God is Lord. This would have once also occurred in Arabic, with names like Ελμαλαχος Κησαδαρος Κοσβανος Κοσβάραχος Κοσγηρος Κοσνάτανος Κοσ τοβαρος Κωσανέλης Νεβοβαλος or like Αζαρηλος Ναταμέλος Ναταρηλος Ραββηλος Φαδαιελ ος Φασαιελη Φασαβαλος could be considered genuinely Arabic. But in the times known to us through native tradition, from the sixth century of the Christian era onwards, the theophoric names of the Arabs are substantive compounds in which the deity stands in the genitive case after a name such as servant, gift, help. The most common prefix is ​​'Abd (fem. Amat), as in Hebrew, Phoenician and Aramaic¹).
Pages: 257
Call Number: SchachtBL1680.W41927
Publisher: Verla von Walter de Gruyter & Co.
Appears in Collections:Prof. J. Schacht Collection / Koleksi Prof. J. Schact

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