- published: 21 Nov 2016
- views: 51
Trousers (pants in North America) are an item of clothing worn from the waist to the ankles, covering both legs separately (rather than with cloth extending across both legs as in robes, skirts, and dresses).
In the UK the word "pants" generally means underwear and not trousers.Shorts are similar to trousers, but with legs that come down only to around the area of the knee, higher or lower depending on the style of the garment. To distinguish them from shorts, trousers may be called "long trousers" in certain contexts such as school uniform, where tailored shorts may be called "short trousers", especially in the UK.
In most of the Western world, trousers have been worn since ancient times and throughout the Medieval period, becoming the most common form of lower-body clothing for adult males in the modern world, although shorts are also widely worn, and kilts and other garments may be worn in various regions and cultures. Breeches were worn instead of trousers in early modern Europe by some men in higher classes of society. Since the mid-20th century, trousers have increasingly been worn by women as well. Jeans, made of denim, are a form of trousers for casual wear, now widely worn all over the world by both sexes. Shorts are often preferred in hot weather or for some sports and also often by children and teenagers. Trousers are worn on the hips or waist and may be held up by their own fastenings, a belt or suspenders (braces). Leggings are form-fitting trousers, of a clingy material, often knitted cotton and spandex (elastane).
The term Semitic or Semite most commonly refers to the Semitic languages, a language family currently present in West Asia, North and East Africa, and Malta
Semitic may also refer to:
The Semitic languages are a branch of the Afroasiatic language family originating in the Middle East. Semitic languages are spoken by more than 330 million people across much of Western Asia, North Africa and the Horn of Africa, as well as in large expatriate communities in North America and Europe. The terminology was first used in the 1780s by German orientalists von Schlözer and Eichhorn, who derived the name from Shem, one of the three sons of Noah in the Book of Genesis.
The most widely spoken Semitic languages today are (numbers given are for native speakers only) Arabic (300 million),Amharic (22 million),Tigrinya (7 million), and Hebrew (unknown; 5 million native and non-native L1 speakers).
Semitic languages are attested in written form from a very early date, with Akkadian and Eblaite texts (written in a script adapted from Sumerian cuneiform) appearing from around the middle of the third millennium BC in Mesopotamia and the northern Levant respectively. However, most scripts used to write Semitic languages are abjads—a type of alphabetic script that omits some or all of the vowels, which is feasible for these languages because the consonants in the Semitic languages are the primary carriers of meaning.
The Middle East (also called the Mid East) is a transcontinental region centered on Western Asia and Egypt. The corresponding adjective is Middle-Eastern and the derived noun is Middle-Easterner. Formerly, the Eurocentric synonym Near East (as opposed to Far East) was commonly used. Arabs, Azeris, Kurds, Persians, and Turks constitute the largest ethnic groups in the region by population, while Armenians, Assyrians, Circassians, Copts, Druze, Jews, Maronites, Somalis, and other ethnic and ethno-religious groups form significant minorities.
The History of the Middle East dates back to ancient times, with the (geo-political) importance of the region being recognized for millennia. Several major religions have their origins in the Middle East, including Judaism, Christianity, and Islam; the Baha'i faith, Mandaeism, Unitarian Druze, and numerous other belief systems were also established within the region. The Middle East generally has a hot, arid climate, with several major rivers providing irrigation to support agriculture in limited areas such as the Nile Delta in Egypt, the Tigris and Euphrates watersheds of Mesopotamia, and most of what is known as the Fertile Crescent. Most of the countries that border the Persian Gulf have vast reserves of crude oil, with the dictatorships of the Arabian Peninsula in particular benefiting from petroleum exports. In modern times the Middle East remains a strategically, economically, politically, culturally and religiously sensitive region.
Males who are J (L147.1) descend from a common ancestor that lived around 3750 BC. Due to the young age of J (L147.1) its a diagnostic marker of the expansion of the Semitic language. Opposed to upstream lineages of J (M267) that migrated out in various directions prior to the J (P58) group aquiring the Afro-Asiatic language by interacting with E1b1b (M215) population who played a Proto-Semitic role in transferring the new language to J (L147.1) tribes آرام ارام عرم عرام الاهواز الاهواز الاندلس الاندلس الاندلس الاندلس اللغه العربية عرب القديمة البابليه بابل حضارة كلدانيه حضارة ديار بكر اللغات العراق فلسطين سوريا لبنان الاردن عمان الجزيرة سامية قرطاج مالطا مصر ماردين البطرون كاديز قبرص مالطة مورسيا غرناطة الجعز العبرية لبنان فينيقيه المالطيه سبأ شام اليمن الحجاز نجد فينيقيا عر عرشالم دو...
► Learn Hebrew or Arabic with a native speaker today: http://go.italki.com/1Ojye8x (italki voucher) Can Hebrew and Arabic speakers understand each other? I answer that question, and take a look at some similarities and differences between Hebrew and Arabic, sister languages of the Semitic Language family. Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus http://facebook.com/langfocus http://instagram.com/langfocus http://twitter.com/langfocus http://langfocus.com
Here are the numbers from 1 - 10 (only the masculine forms) in Akkadian, Ugaritic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic, Sabaic, Ge'ez, Coptic and Late Egyptian. Numbers are a very basic part of human language and give you a good insight into language relationships.
Akkadian, Asyrian, Amorite, Aramaic, and even some languages that start with other letters! Next video can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHePoR0mRTY Intro song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR7IOOLAiRo Outro song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3i_rLnHGdg
A short video about the expansion of the Semitic languages. It's just one of many possible scenarios and is not intended to be particularly accurate, especially concerning geography.
What is SEMITIC LANGUAGE? What does SEMITIC LANGUAGE mean? SEMITIC LANGUAGE meaning. The Semitic languages are a branch of the Afroasiatic language family originating in the Middle East. Semitic languages are spoken by more than 330 million people across much of Western Asia, Anatolia, North Africa and the Horn of Africa, as well as in often large expatriate communities in North America and Europe, with smaller communities in South America, Australasia, The Caucasus and Central Asia. The terminology was first used in the 1780s by members of the Göttingen School of History, who derived the name from Shem, one of the three sons of Noah in the Book of Genesis. The most widely spoken Semitic languages today are (numbers given are for native speakers only) Arabic (300 million), Amharic (22 mi...
Semitic languages like Hebrew and Arabic evolved a unique way to write vowels... with consonants! See how in this episode of Thoth's Pill: an Animated History of Writing. You're back in the ancient Middle East, where seemingly everyone's been passing around the Phoenician consonant alphabet. There's a problem with this abjad - sometimes those missing vowels cause issues. Instead of inventing vowels (like the Greeks did in the last episode), Semitic speakers use some of their consonants for vowels, too! This is the birth of "matres lectionis". But that's not nearly enough for pickier scribes. See bickering scribes come up with a more detailed system, a system of vowel marks - dots and dashes surrounding consonants. These vowel pointers (harakat in Arabic, niqqud in Hebrew) explicitly indi...
A while back, Vsauce did a video with a bright yellow thumbnail titled "this is not yellow." His point was that the pixels on a screen only ever actually produce red, green and blue light, and that there were no beams of light coming from that thumbnail that would have, alone, been perceived as "yellow." He was wrong, of course, in saying that the thumbnail wasn't yellow, but only because he was defining "yellow" differently from how we normally use the word, and he was using that misuse of terminology to teach people about the nature of color. This video was my attempt to do something similar. Of course English isn't semitic. I knew that when I made this video. That was the point, I wanted to have a provocative title which was blatantly wrong. For the sake of teaching people about ...
Males who are J (L147.1) descend from a common ancestor that lived around 3750 BC. Due to the young age of J (L147.1) its a diagnostic marker of the expansion of the Semitic language. Opposed to upstream lineages of J (M267) that migrated out in various directions prior to the J (P58) group aquiring the Afro-Asiatic language by interacting with E1b1b (M215) population who played a Proto-Semitic role in transferring the new language to J (L147.1) tribes آرام ارام عرم عرام الاهواز الاهواز الاندلس الاندلس الاندلس الاندلس اللغه العربية عرب القديمة البابليه بابل حضارة كلدانيه حضارة ديار بكر اللغات العراق فلسطين سوريا لبنان الاردن عمان الجزيرة سامية قرطاج مالطا مصر ماردين البطرون كاديز قبرص مالطة مورسيا غرناطة الجعز العبرية لبنان فينيقيه المالطيه سبأ شام اليمن الحجاز نجد فينيقيا عر عرشالم دو...
► Learn Hebrew or Arabic with a native speaker today: http://go.italki.com/1Ojye8x (italki voucher) Can Hebrew and Arabic speakers understand each other? I answer that question, and take a look at some similarities and differences between Hebrew and Arabic, sister languages of the Semitic Language family. Support Langfocus on Patreon: http://patreon.com/langfocus http://facebook.com/langfocus http://instagram.com/langfocus http://twitter.com/langfocus http://langfocus.com
Here are the numbers from 1 - 10 (only the masculine forms) in Akkadian, Ugaritic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic, Sabaic, Ge'ez, Coptic and Late Egyptian. Numbers are a very basic part of human language and give you a good insight into language relationships.
Akkadian, Asyrian, Amorite, Aramaic, and even some languages that start with other letters! Next video can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHePoR0mRTY Intro song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR7IOOLAiRo Outro song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3i_rLnHGdg
A short video about the expansion of the Semitic languages. It's just one of many possible scenarios and is not intended to be particularly accurate, especially concerning geography.
What is SEMITIC LANGUAGE? What does SEMITIC LANGUAGE mean? SEMITIC LANGUAGE meaning. The Semitic languages are a branch of the Afroasiatic language family originating in the Middle East. Semitic languages are spoken by more than 330 million people across much of Western Asia, Anatolia, North Africa and the Horn of Africa, as well as in often large expatriate communities in North America and Europe, with smaller communities in South America, Australasia, The Caucasus and Central Asia. The terminology was first used in the 1780s by members of the Göttingen School of History, who derived the name from Shem, one of the three sons of Noah in the Book of Genesis. The most widely spoken Semitic languages today are (numbers given are for native speakers only) Arabic (300 million), Amharic (22 mi...
Semitic languages like Hebrew and Arabic evolved a unique way to write vowels... with consonants! See how in this episode of Thoth's Pill: an Animated History of Writing. You're back in the ancient Middle East, where seemingly everyone's been passing around the Phoenician consonant alphabet. There's a problem with this abjad - sometimes those missing vowels cause issues. Instead of inventing vowels (like the Greeks did in the last episode), Semitic speakers use some of their consonants for vowels, too! This is the birth of "matres lectionis". But that's not nearly enough for pickier scribes. See bickering scribes come up with a more detailed system, a system of vowel marks - dots and dashes surrounding consonants. These vowel pointers (harakat in Arabic, niqqud in Hebrew) explicitly indi...
A while back, Vsauce did a video with a bright yellow thumbnail titled "this is not yellow." His point was that the pixels on a screen only ever actually produce red, green and blue light, and that there were no beams of light coming from that thumbnail that would have, alone, been perceived as "yellow." He was wrong, of course, in saying that the thumbnail wasn't yellow, but only because he was defining "yellow" differently from how we normally use the word, and he was using that misuse of terminology to teach people about the nature of color. This video was my attempt to do something similar. Of course English isn't semitic. I knew that when I made this video. That was the point, I wanted to have a provocative title which was blatantly wrong. For the sake of teaching people about ...
We conclude our survey of the Semitic languages with a look at Phoenician, Ugaritic and Arabic
The story of Hebrew's close relatives! Part 1 begins with a look at the cuneiform writing system and the Eastern Semitic languages of Babylonian and Assyrian
CBI Online Learning: Tour of the Semitic Languages Part 2
Michael S Heiser - Hebrew Bible, Semitic language and ancient history expert discussing Prophecy http://drmsh.com/
Richard S. Hess Earl S. Kalland Professor of Old Testament and Semitic Languages 10/27/2009
Richard E. Averbeck Professor of Old Testament and Semitic languages 01/15/2003
Adam as a proper name, predates its generic use in Semitic languages. Its earliest known use http://theriskofsuccessfulpeople.blogspot.com/1185836 as a genuine name in historicity is Adamu, as recorded in the Assyrian King List.
Here is a clip from a longer video I'm working on, which will detail my "Quest4Truth" regarding what the Bible has to say concerning the whole Flat Earth issue. Like it or not, believe it or not, accept it or not... from Genesis to Revelation the Bible absolutely IS a Flat Earth book. This is confirmed by a simple unbiased reading of the Scriptures... as well as by a doctor (who is a Semitic language expert and a Ancient Near East scholar for Logos Bible Software)... and of course, the village idiot.