Ḥaá¸Âramautic or Ḥaá¸Âramic was the easternmost of the four known languages of the Old South Arabian subgroup of the Semitic languages. It was used in the Kingdom of Hadhramaut and also the area round the Hadhramite capital of Shabwa, in what is now Yemen. The Hadramites also controlled the trade in frankincense through their important trading post of Sumhuram (Hadramautic ), now Khor Rori in the Dhofar Governorate, Oman.
Almost the entire body of evidence for the ancient Ḥaá¸Âramautic language comes from inscriptions written in the monumental Ancient South Arabian script, consisting of 29 letters, and deriving from the Proto-Sinaitic script. The sounds of the language were essentially the same as those of Sabaic.
Noteworthy characteristics of Ḥaá¸Âramautic include its tendency, especially in inscriptions from Wadi Ḥaá¸Âhramaut, to represent Old South Arabian ṯ as s<sub>3</sub>: thus we find s<sub>2</sub>ls<sub>3</sub> ("three"; cf. Sabaean s<sub>2</sub>lṯ.) There are also instances where ṯ is written for an older form s<sub>3</sub>; e.g. Ḥaá¸Âramautic mṯnad ("inscription"), which is msnd in the rest of Old South Arabian.
Potsherds with Ancient South Arabian letters on them, found in Raybà «n, the old Ḥaá¸Âramitic capital, have been radiocarbon dated to the 12th century BC. The language was certainly in use from 800 BC but in the fourth century AD, the Kingdom of Hadhramaut was conquered by the Ḥimyarites, who used Sabaic as an official language, and after then there are no more records in Ḥaá¸Âramautic.
During the course of the language's history there appeared particular phonetic changes, such as the change from ä to ÃÂ, from Ạto á¹£, from ṯ to s<sub>3</sub>. As in other Semitic languages n can be assimilated to a following consonant, compare þnfs<sub>1</sub> "souls" > þfs<sub>1</sub>
In Ḥaá¸Âramautic the third person pronouns begin with s<sub>1</sub>. It has feminine forms ending in ṯ and s<sub>3</sub>.