The notation
"XX (xxxx)" is used, where
XX is the spelling in Punic characters (without vowels), while
xxxx is a phonetic rendering, including vowels, as can be reconstructed from Punic language texts written in the Latin or Greek alphabets.
Nouns Nouns, including adjectives, in Punic and Neo-Punic can be of two genders (masculine or feminine), three numbers (singular, dual, or plural), and in two 'states', the absolute state or the so-called construct state. A word in the construct state has a close relation with the word that follows, a relation that is often translated by "of". For example, in the combination "sons of Hanno", "sons of" would be in the construct state, while "Hanno" would be in the absolute state. Morphology:
Pronouns Demonstrative pronoun The demonstrative pronoun 'this, these' was:
Definite article The definite article was evolving from Phoenician
ha- to an unaspirated article
a-. By 406 BCE, both variants were attested in the same inscription (
CIS I 5510). Although in later times the
h- was no longer pronounced, the "historical" spelling
H- kept being used, in addition to
’- and Ø-, and one even finds
Ḥ-.
Personal pronoun The personal pronouns, when used on their own, are: (forms between [...] are attested in Phoenician only) When used as a direct or indirect object ('me, him', 'to me, to him') or as a possessive ('mine, his') the personal pronoun takes the form of a suffix. These suffixes can be combined with verbal forms, substantives, and particles. Examples: :
ḤN (ḥan) = (verb:) 'he has shown favor' → ::
ḤN’ (ḥannō) = 'he has shown favor to him (-ō)' = proper name
Hanno ::
ḤNYB‘L (ḥannī ba‘al) = (verb:) 'Ba‘al has shown favor to me (-ī)' = proper name
Hannibal :
BN (bin) = 'son' → ::
BN’, BNY (binō) = 'his son' :
’T (’et) = 'with' (preposition) → ::
’TY (’ittī) = 'together with me' The paradigm for the suffixed personal pronouns is:
Relative pronoun The relative pronoun, 'who, that, which', in both Punic and Neo-Punic is’
Š (’īs). In late Neo-Punic '
M’
' (
mū) (originally an interrogative pronoun, 'what?') emerged as a second relative pronoun. Both pronouns were not inflected. The combination '
’Š M’
' (
’īs mū) was also used in late Neo-Punic.
Determinative pronoun A pronoun
Š- (si-) was used to express an indirect genitival relationship between two substantives; it can be translated as 'of'. This uninflected pronoun was prefixed to the second of the two substantives. Example: :
HKHNT ŠRBTN (
ha-kohènet si-Rabat-ēn), 'the priestess of our Lady'
Interrogative pronoun There are two interrogative pronouns: :
MY (mī), 'who?' (cf. Hebrew
mī) :
M’ (mū), 'what?' (cf. Hebrew
māh). In Neo-Punic this pronoun is also used as a relative pronoun, 'that, which'. Neither of the two pronouns was inflected.
Indefinite pronoun In Punic and Neo-Punic there was no exclusive indefinite pronoun. Whenever such a pronoun might be needed, it was circumscribed by means of words like
’ḤD (’ḥḥad), 'one',
’Š (’īs) or
’DM (’adom), 'a man, a person', or
KL (kil), 'all'.
Verbs Morphology The nucleus of Punic and Neo-Punic verbs is a "root" consisting of three or, sometimes, two consonants. By adding prefixes and suffixes, and by varying the vowels that are inserted into the root, the various forms of the verb are formed. These belong to six "stems" (conjugations). The basic, and most common, stem type is the Qal. The other common stems are: • Niph‘al (the usual passive stem); • Pi‘el (a so-called
intensive stem); • Yiph‘il (a
causative stem; corresponds to the Hiph‘il stem in
Hebrew). A few other stems are found only very rarely: • Qal Passive; • Pu‘al (passive of the Pi‘el stem); • Yitpe‘el (reflexive variant of the Pi‘el; Hebrew Hitpa‘el).
Qal The paradigm of the Qal is (the verb '
B-R-K
' (
barok), 'to bless', is used as an example): : (note 1:)
barok literally means 'he blessed'; it is tradition to consider the 3rd person masculine suffixing form as the standard form of the Punic verb. : (note 2:) Forms between [...] are known from Phoenician but have not yet been attested in Punic. : (note 3:) The Hebrew verb of the same meaning given for comparison, בֵּרֵךְ berekh, is a Pi’el verb.
Niph‘al The following Niph‘al forms are attested in Punic and Neo-Punic (verb:
P-‘-L, fel, 'to make'; < Phoenician
pa‘ol):
Pi‘el The following Pi‘el forms are attested in Punic and Neo-Punic (verb:
Ḥ-D-Š, ḥados, 'to make new, to restore'):
Yiph‘il The following Yiph‘il forms are attested in Punic and Neo-Punic (verb:
Q-D-Š, qados, 'to dedicate'):
Weak verbs Many (Neo-)Punic verbs are "weak": depending on the specific root consonants certain deviations of the standard verbal paradigm occur. For example in the group I-
n (verbs with first consonant
N-) the
n may disappear through
assimilation. Summary:
Form and use In Punic there was no one-on-one correlation between form and use. For example, the suffix form (perfect) is often translated by a present tense, but it may also refer to the past or future.
Tense, aspect, and mood of verbal forms were determined by syntax, not by morphology. The tense, aspect and mood of a given verbal form may depend on: • whether the form is part of the main clause, or of a subordinate clause; • if in a subordinate clause, it may depend on the
type of subordinate clause (for example, conditional, or temporal); • word order may be important: does the verbal form precede or follow the subject of the clause?; • it also may depend on a verbal form earlier in the same clause: suffix forms or an infinitive absolute used consecutive to another verbal form, take the same tense, aspect and mood as the preceding form.
Numbers The numbers from one to ten are: Punic and Neo-Punic take part in the so-called "Semitic
polarity": the numbers 3-10 take the feminine form with masculine nouns, and vice versa. Thus with masculine
BN (
bin, 'son') or
YM (
yom, 'day'), numbers take the feminine form ending in
-T, while with feminine
ŠT (
sat, 'year'), they take the masculine form without
-T. For example: :
‛W’ Š‛NT ‛SR WŠ‛LŠ (ḥawa’ sanūt ‛asar w-salūs): :: 'He lived (verb
Ḥ-W-Y, 'to live') thirteen years' (
KAI 144) Multiples of ten take the form of a plural (
-īm) of the word for 10 or 3-9: One hundred is
M’T (
mīt), its
dual M’TM (
mitēm) is 200; 1000 is
’LP (
’èlef), and 10,000 is
RB’ (
ribō).
Particles An important particle is the so-called
nota objecti, or
accusative particle,
’YT (’et) (rarely
’T; usually
T- before a substantive with definite article or with demonstrative pronoun). It is placed before a substantive and indicates that that substantive is an object in the sentence (mostly a direct object).
Syntax Word order in Punic and Neo-Punic can vary, but this variation has its grammatical limits. For example, in a clause with an imperfect prefixing form the subject can either precede or follow the verb. However, as a rule, if the verb precedes it refers to the present, while if the subject precedes, the verb refers to the future. The repertoire of possible ways in (Neo-)Punic to express a certain combination of tense, aspect, and mood seems to be more restricted than in Phoenician, but at the same time the rules seem to have become less strict. ==Sample text==