የቆምጬ የወፍ ቋንቋ ከግእዝ አልመጣም ከአገውኛ እንጂ‼️
Posted: 04 Mar 2026, 09:20
ባለፈው 40% አገወ ቆማጣው ቆምጬ እራሱን አማራ የሚል አጨበርባሪ ነጭ ነኝ ብሎ እንደሚያጭበረብር ይሁዳዊ ነኝ እንደሚል አስይተን ነበር!!
ይኸው ቋንቋው በ12ኛ ምእተ አመት እንዴት እንደፈጠሩት እናሳያለን!!
Amharic, a South Ethio-Semitic language, emerged as a distinct spoken language between the 10th and 12th centuries CE. It developed from a mix of South Semitic dialects brought from the Middle East (via South Arabia) and a strong substratum of Cushitic languages, particularly Agew, spoken in the Ethiopian highlands.
Origins and Evolution
Middle East Connection (Semitic) (1st Millennium BCE): Migrants from Southern Arabia crossed into modern-day Eritrea/Ethiopia around 1000 B.C., bringing Semitic languages that eventually diverged into Ge'ez and later other Ethio-Semitic languages.
Agew Substratum (Cushitic): As these Semitic speakers moved inland, they blended with indigenous Agew-speaking populations. Amharic is heavily influenced by Agew (Cushitic) in its structure and vocabulary.
Emergence (10th–13th Century CE): Amharic solidified as a distinct language during the 10th to 12th centuries when the power base shifted from Axum to the Amhara region.
Literary Development (14th Century): The earliest written Amharic documents (songs and poems) date from the 14th century, becoming the royal/court language around this time.
While sharing roots with Ge'ez, Amharic is not its direct descendant but rather developed alongside it, heavily influenced by the local Agew language.
ይኸው ቋንቋው በ12ኛ ምእተ አመት እንዴት እንደፈጠሩት እናሳያለን!!
Amharic, a South Ethio-Semitic language, emerged as a distinct spoken language between the 10th and 12th centuries CE. It developed from a mix of South Semitic dialects brought from the Middle East (via South Arabia) and a strong substratum of Cushitic languages, particularly Agew, spoken in the Ethiopian highlands.
Origins and Evolution
Middle East Connection (Semitic) (1st Millennium BCE): Migrants from Southern Arabia crossed into modern-day Eritrea/Ethiopia around 1000 B.C., bringing Semitic languages that eventually diverged into Ge'ez and later other Ethio-Semitic languages.
Agew Substratum (Cushitic): As these Semitic speakers moved inland, they blended with indigenous Agew-speaking populations. Amharic is heavily influenced by Agew (Cushitic) in its structure and vocabulary.
Emergence (10th–13th Century CE): Amharic solidified as a distinct language during the 10th to 12th centuries when the power base shifted from Axum to the Amhara region.
Literary Development (14th Century): The earliest written Amharic documents (songs and poems) date from the 14th century, becoming the royal/court language around this time.
While sharing roots with Ge'ez, Amharic is not its direct descendant but rather developed alongside it, heavily influenced by the local Agew language.