Like many languages, the Semitic languages have consonants belonging to a “voiceless series” (pronounced without vibration of the vocal cords, as in English p, t, k) and a “voiced series” (the pronunciation of which is accompanied by a buzzing of the vocal cords, as in English b, d, g). In addition, the Semitic languages employ a third series, known as “emphatic.” The exact nature of emphasis in the Semitic protolanguage remains debated, because the attested languages have two distinct modes for producing these sounds. An example of the first mode occurs in Arabic, where the emphatics ṭ, ẓ (from proto-Semitic ...(100 of 5374 words)