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searching for Nabataean Aramaic 6 found (38 total)

alternate case: nabataean Aramaic

Ibn Wahshiyya (1,896 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article

Ibn Waḥshiyya (Arabic: ابن وحشية), died c. 930, was a Nabataean (Aramaic-speaking, rural Iraqi) agriculturalist, toxicologist, and alchemist born in Qussīn
Dushara (663 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Retrieved 2021-03-14. Suchard, Benjamin D. (13 June 2023). "What can Nabataean Aramaic tell us about Pre-Islamic Arabic?". Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy
Laïla Nehmé (535 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
local agriculture. She has studied the transition of scripts from the Nabataean Aramaic to the recognisably Arabic form between the third and fifth centuries
Abjad (1,930 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Kashmiri, Persian, Pashto, Uyghur, Kurdish, Urdu, many others 512 CE Nabataean Aramaic Aramaic (Imperial) no no right-left 22 3 Middle East Achaemenid, Persian
History of the Arabic alphabet (2,585 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Laïla Nehmé has demonstrated the transition of scripts from the Nabataean Aramaic to the recognisably Arabic form that appears to have occurred between
David Frank Graf (1,825 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
in Jordan, he published unrecorded inscriptions in South Arabian, Nabataean Aramaic, and Ancient North Arabian languages. The discovery of lengthy Ancient