Hittite kapart‐/kapirt‐ ‘small rodent’ and Proto‐Semitic *ˁkbr‐t‐ ‘mouse, jerboa’

Abstract

The Hittite doublet kapart-/kapirt-, designating a small rodent, is currently assumed to continue an Indo-European formation. Hittitologists almost unanimously analyze it as an ablauting t-stem coined from the preverb ∗ko(m)- 'together' and the Indo-European root ∗bher- 'to carry', i. e. ∗ko(m)-bher-t- or ∗ko(m)- bhr-t. Accordingly, the meaning 'small rodent' is explained as having developed from 'collector' or 'hoarder'. It appears that there is a good alternative to this etymology, however, as the Semitic languages offer evidence for a feminine t-stem to the root ∗kbr- meaning 'mouse; jerboa', viz. Akkadian akbartu-, Phoenician kbrt and Syriac ukbarta. It seems more plausible that this is the source of Hitt. kapart-/kapirt-.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftIndogermanische Forschungen
Vol/bind121
Udgave nummer1
Sider (fra-til)53–62
ISSN0019-7262
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 1 nov. 2016

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