Notice about reconstructed forms
The study of language is aided by means of documented evidence in the form-factor of writing. However, not all languages utilized writing at all points in time. Consequently, scholars rely on the comparative method in order to fill this gap. While useful, this method is not perfect. This is why words that begin with '*' are called reconstructions; they are word forms reconstructed by means of said method.
- What this means: information with 'proto-' or '*' before it is either speculative, understood as accurate by a minority of scholars, or both
- Why this is: there is a lack of attested written records or scholars may disagree
- Why this matters: these data may be inaccurate or subject to rapid change
- Why this is included: reconstructed languages and terms help scholars study historical linguistics; and they encourage open debate
In short, it is not recommended to rely on these data as facts. Before referencing these data for scholarly works, we recommend checking for newer sources. If referencing said data, we recommend introducing them with indeterminate modifiers such as "some evidence may suggest that ..." or "one interpretation by [scholar name] argues that ...", and so forth.
Main definition source for *libb-
Coming soon.
Other mentions of *libb-
Descendants of *libb-
-
Ancient Aramaic:
Leb
(leḇ · noun)
"heart; mind"
-
Ancient Hebrew:
Lev
(לב · lev · noun)
"heart; core, center; mind"
-
Eblaite:
Libbu
(𒇷 𒅤 · libbu · noun)
"heart"
-
Akkadian:
Libbum
(𒊮 · libbum · noun)
"heart; mind, thought; center, wish, midst"
Citation
PsychLing Contributors. "*libb-." PsychLing, OMNIKA Foundation, 3 Sep. 2023, psylng.org/mli/afro/proto-semitic/libb. Accessed 21 Nov. 2024.
PsychLing (2023, September 3). *libb-. Retrieved from https://psylng.org/mli/afro/proto-semitic/libb
Bibliography
Huehnergard, John, and Na'ama Pat El, eds. The Semitic Languages. Routledge Language Family Series. 2nd Edition. New York, NY: Routledge, 2019.
Internet Archive Contributors. "Wayback Machine." San Francisco, CA: Internet Archive. Created October 24, 2001. Accessed July 21, 2023. https://web.archive.org. [Visit]
Takács, Gábor. "Layers of the Oldest Egyptian Lexicon I." Rocznik Orientalistyczny 68, no. 1 (2015): 85–39.
Wales, Jimmy D., et al. "Wiktionary: The Free Dictionary." San Francisco, CA: Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. Created December 12, 2002. Accessed July 28, 2023. https://wiktionary.org. [Visit]
PsychLing MLI
*lib- is a reconstructed root from the proto-language known as Proto-Afro-Asiatic. Scholars believe that it means "heart."
Read morePsychLing Glossary
Attested Language is a term in
PsychLing Glossary
Comparative Linguistics is a field of study that concerns the scientific study of comparing languages.
Read morePsychLing Glossary
Comparative Method is a term in
PsychLing Glossary
Language Family is a term in
PsychLing Glossary
Proto- is a term in
PsychLing Glossary
Proto-Language is a term in
PsychLing MLI
Proto-Semitic is a proto-language that belongs to the Afro-Asiatic language family.
Read morePsychLing Glossary
Reconstruction is a term in