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South Arabian

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South Arabian is a technical designation within Semitic linguistics for one of two main branches of South Semitic. (The other branch, Ethiopian, covers all South Semitic languages spoken on the African continent.) Geographically, the term "South Arabian'" covers South Semitic languages spoken on the southern Arabian peninsula in modern Yemen and Oman and the island of Socotra, part of Yemen - i.e. those not found in Africa. All the contemporary South Arabian languages are spoken by tiny populations under constant pressure from the dominant position of Arabic in the surrounding populations. Literacy in these languages among native speakers is practically nil.

Old South Arabian

Old South Arabian, though little heard of today, was the language of the great civilizations of South Arabia (e.g. Sabaean and Marib) with a written form of the language found on rock inscriptions showing it to be closely related to the modern Ge'ez alphabet still in use in Ethiopia and Eritrea. The relation between the two scripts is disputed.

Moden South Arabian

The Modern South Arabian or Eastern South Semitic languages are spoken mainly by tiny minority populations on the Arabian peninsula in Yemen and Oman.

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