Ugaritic ( ) is an extinct Northwest Semitic language known through the Ugaritic texts discovered by French archaeologists in 1928 at Ugarit, including several major literary texts, notably the Baal cycle. The script is described as âÂÂa special alphabetic Cuneiform,â reflecting an idiom related to Canaanite and Hebrew languages.
Like Hebrew the short script of Ugarit has twenty-two characters: nearly identical to Hebrew in terms of their phonetic values (what they sound like) if not in terms of the visual elements or media of their inscription. Early samples of Hebrew are scratched on stone or potsherds whereas Ugaritic is punched on clay, like cuneiform.
A scholar of the period hailed Ugaritic as "the greatest literary discovery from antiquity since the deciphering of the Egyptian hieroglyphs and Mesopotamian cuneiform.âÂÂ
The Ugaritic language is attested in texts from the 14th through the early 12th century BC. The city of Ugarit was destroyed roughly 1190 BC.
Literary texts discovered at Ugarit include the Legend of Keret or Kirta, the legends of Danel (AKA 'Aqhat), the Myth of Baal-Aliyan, and the Death of Baal. The latter two are also known collectively as the Baal Cycle. These texts reveal aspects of ancient Northwest Semitic religion in Syria-Canaan during the Late Bronze Age.
Edward Greenstein has proposed that Ugaritic texts might help solve biblical puzzles such as the anachronism of Ezekiel mentioning Daniel in actually referring to Danel, a hero from the Ugaritic Tale of Aqhat.
Ugaritic had 28 consonantal phonemes (including two semivowels) and eight vowel phonemes (three short vowels and five long vowels): a ài ë u à « àà Â. The phonemes àand à  occur only as long vowels and are the result of monophthongization of the diphthongs ðy and aw, respectively.
The following table shows Proto-Semitic phonemes and their correspondences among Ugaritic, Akkadian, Classical Arabic and Tiberian Hebrew:
The Ugaritic alphabet is a cuneiform script used beginning in the 15th century BC. Like most Semitic scripts, it is an abjad, where each symbol stands for a consonant, leaving the reader to supply the appropriate vowel. Only after an aleph the vowel is indicated (âÂÂa, âÂÂi, âÂÂu). With other consonants one can often guess the unwritten vowel, and thus vocalize the text, from (a) parallel cases with an aleph, (b) texts where Ugaritic words are written in Akkadian cuneiform syllables, (c) comparison with other West-Semitic languages, for example Hebrew and Arabic, (d) generalized vocalization rules, and (e), in poetry, parallelisms are also helpful to interpret the consonantal skeleton.
Although it appears similar to Mesopotamian cuneiform (whose writing techniques it borrowed), its symbols and symbol meanings are unrelated. It is the oldest example of the family of West Semitic scripts such as the Phoenician, Paleo-Hebrew, and Aramaic alphabets (including the Hebrew alphabet). The so-called "long alphabet" has 30 letters while the "short alphabet" has 22. Other languages (particularly Hurrian) were occasionally written in the Ugarit area, although not elsewhere.
Clay tablets written in Ugaritic provide the earliest evidence of both the Levantine ordering of the alphabet, which gave rise to the alphabetic order of the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin alphabets; and the South Semitic order, which gave rise to the order of the Ge'ez script. The script was written from left to right.
Ugaritic is an inflected language, and as a Semitic language its grammatical features are highly similar to those found in Classical Arabic and Akkadian. It possesses two genders (masculine and feminine), three cases for nouns and adjectives (nominative, accusative, and genitive [also, note the possibility of a locative case]); three numbers: (singular, dual, and plural); and verb aspects similar to those found in other Northwest Semitic languages. The word order for Ugaritic is verbâÂÂsubjectâÂÂobject (VSO), possessedâÂÂpossessor (NG), and nounâÂÂadjective (NA). Ugaritic is considered a conservative Semitic language, since it retains most of the Proto-Semitic phonemes, the basic qualities of the vowel, the case system, the word order of the Proto-Semitic ancestor, and the lack of the definite article.
Ugaritic, like all Semitic languages, exhibits a unique pattern of stems consisting typically of "triliteral", or 3-consonant consonantal roots (2- and 4-consonant roots also exist), from which nouns, adjectives, and verbs are formed in various ways: e.g. by inserting vowels, doubling consonants, and/or adding prefixes, suffixes, or infixes.
Ugaritic verbs are based on mostly three-literal roots (like all Semitic languages) (a few verbs have two- or four-consonant roots). For example, r-g-m, âÂÂto sayâÂÂ. By adding prefixes, infixes, and suffixes, and varying the vowels, the various verbal forms are formed. (Because in Ugaritic vowels are hardly written, these vowel variations often are not clearly visible).
Verbs can take several of a dozen stem patterns, or binyanim, that change the basic meaning of the verb, and make it for example passive, causative, or intensive. The basic form (in German: Grundstamm) is the G stem.
The verbal forms for each stem can be divided in five verbal form groups:
Verbs have one of three different vowel patterns, -a-, -i-, and -u-:
There is no one-on-one link between morphology and tense (past, present or future). This is because Ugaritic is an aspect language: verbal forms do not primarily indicate the timing of activities, but they indicate aspect: the suffix conjugation (qtl) has perfective aspect, it is used when viewing an activity as having a completion; the prefix conjugation (yqtl) has imperfective aspect, it is used when it is deemed irrelevant whether the activity has an end or beginning.
Ugaritic verbs can have several moods, both indicative and injunctive (jussive, cohortative). Moods are most clearly visible in the prefix conjugation (see below).
The suffix conjugation (qtl) has perfective aspect. Taking the root RGM (which means "to say") as an example, ragama may be translated as âÂÂhe saysâ (at this very moment), or âÂÂhe has saidâ (and has finished speaking).
The vowel between the second and third root consonant can be -a-, -i-, or -u-. Most verbs describe an activity (so-called âÂÂactive verbsâÂÂ) and have -a-. Verbs describing a state or property (âÂÂstative verbsâÂÂ) have -i- or (rarely) -u-.
The paradigm of the suffix conjugation (or Perfect) is as follows for the a-verb RGM, the i-verb à  Bá¶ (âÂÂto be (become) satiatedâÂÂ), and the u-verb MRá¹¢ (âÂÂto fall illâÂÂ):
The prefix conjugation yqtl- takes three forms: yiqtal-, yaqtil-, and yaqtul-. The specific pattern is determined by the stem consonants. Therefore, there is no simple one-on-one relation with the three qtl vowel patterns, qatal, qatil, and qatul, because the qtl vowel pattern depends not on the consonant pattern, but on a verb's meaning (active or stative).
For example, the following three verbs all have a qtl of the qatal type, but their yqtl patterns differ:
The Imperfect paradigms for the three patterns are as follows, for the verbs RGM, âÂÂto sayâ (yaqtul- pattern), à  âÂÂiL, âÂÂto askâ (yiqtal- pattern), and YRD, âÂÂto go downâ (yaqtil pattern):
The prefix conjugation takes four or five different endings (yqtl, yqtlu, yqtla, yqtln). There are three clear moods (indicative, jussive, and volitive or cohortative). The so-called energic forms, yqtln, with an -n suffix (-an, -anna; possibly also -un, -unna), apparently have the same meaning as the shorter forms without the -n suffix.
The imperative takes three forms, qatal, qitil, and qutul, where the vowels are equal to the second vowel of the imperfect. So, if the imperfect is yaqtul-, the imperative is qutul; if yaqtil-, then qitil; if yiqtal-, then qatal.
Examples (the verb YRD âÂÂto go down, to descendâ is a so-called âÂÂweakâ verb, the first consonant Y disappears in the imperative):
The paradigm of the active participle of G stems is as follows (verb MLK, âÂÂto be kingâÂÂ):
The passive participle is quite rare. There seem to be two forms (verbs RGM âÂÂto sayâÂÂ, ḤRM âÂÂto divideâÂÂ):
Other stems than the G (and N) stem form their participles by means of a m- prefix; for example mulaḫḫià ¡u (âÂÂconjurorâÂÂ, D stem Lá¸ªà  âÂÂto whisperâÂÂ), muà ¡amá¹Âiru (âÂÂ[the god] who rainsâÂÂ, à  stem, MṬR âÂÂto rain downâÂÂ).
Like other Semitic languages, Ugaritic has two infinitives, the infinitive absolute and the infinitive construct. However, in Ugaritic the two have an identical form. The usual form is halÃÂku (âÂÂto goâÂÂ, verb hlk), but a few verbs use an alternative form *hilku, for example niãru, âÂÂto guardâ (verb nãr).
The infinitive absolute is often used preceding a perfect or imperfect verbal form, to put emphasis on that following verbal form. Such an infinive absolute may be translated as âÂÂverily, certainly, absolutelyâÂÂ. For example, halÃÂku halaka, âÂÂhe certainly goesâ (literally, âÂÂto go! he goesâÂÂ). An isolated infinitive absolute may also be used instead of any perfect, imperfect, or imperative verbal form.
The infinitive construct is often used after the prepositions lê (âÂÂtoâÂÂ) and bi (âÂÂin, byâÂÂ): bi-à ¡aâÂÂÃÂli âÂÂin asking, by asking, while askingâ (verb à ¡âÂÂal âÂÂto askâÂÂ; note that after the preposition b (bi) the genitive of the infinitive is used).
Ugaritic verbs occur in about a dozen reconstructed patterns or binyanim (verb RGM, âÂÂto sayâÂÂ, unless indicated otherwise): The large majority of verbal forms (about 70%) belong to the G stem (German: Grundstamm, âÂÂbasic stemâÂÂ).
In Ugaritic, âÂÂweak verbsâ are verbs whose roots contain a weak consonant, that is, a consonant that may disappear in some forms (in particular the imperative), or change into another consonant (some imperfect forms). Weak consonants are w and y, and also n if it is the first root consonant. Verbs with only two root consonants are weak too.
Due to their weak consonants, weak verbs can undergo phonetic changes, such as the assimilation of waw (w) to yod (y), especially in the absence of an intervening vowel. This characteristic impacts the verb's inflection, resulting in variations that are atypical compared to regular (strong) verbs. This phenomenon is akin to that observed in other Semitic languages, including Hebrew.
The following list shows the various classes of weak verbs. Weak forms are shown in bold, the strong verb RGM is shown for comparison:
In Ugaritic there also exist "doubly weak verbs", which contain two weak consonants.
Nouns (substantives, adjectives, personal names) in their basic form (nominative singular) end in -u. Nominal forms are categorized according to their inflection into: cases (nominative, genitive, and accusative), state (absolute and construct), gender (masculine and feminine), and number (singular, dual, and plural).
Here is the full paradigm for a masculine substantive (malku, âÂÂkingâÂÂ) and a feminine substantive (malkatu, âÂÂqueenâÂÂ).
Note (*): with lengthening of the final vowel of the stem: mal(a)kat- > mal(a)kÃÂt-.
Ugaritic has three grammatical cases corresponding to: nominative, genitive, and accusative. Normally, singular nouns take the ending -u in the nominative, -i in the genitive and -a in the accusative. After prepositions as a rule the genitive is used. The accusative is also used adverbially (á¹ÂÃÂbu, âÂÂgoodâ > á¹ÂÃÂba, âÂÂwellâÂÂ) and as a kind of locative (à ¡amîma = âÂÂto the heavens, in heavenâÂÂ). More often, a locative is formed by appending a suffix -h to the accusative: âÂÂará¹£u, âÂÂearthâÂÂ, accusative âÂÂará¹£a, locative âÂÂará¹£ah, âÂÂearthwardâÂÂ. There is no dative; instead the preposition lê, âÂÂto, forâÂÂ, + genitive is used.
As in Arabic, some exceptional nouns (known as diptotes) have the suffix -a in the genitive. There is no Ugaritic equivalent for Classical Arabic nunation or Akkadian mimation.
Nouns in Ugaritic occur in two states: absolute and construct. The construct (or âÂÂboundâÂÂ) state indicates that a noun is closely linked to the following noun. For example, âÂÂthe house of the kingâ could in Ugaritic in principle be expressed in two ways:
1. âÂÂthe houseâ (absolute state) âÂÂ<u>of</u> the kingâ (absolute state, genitive). This might be called the âÂÂLatinâ way of expression (domus regis);
2. âÂÂthe house <u>of</u>â (construct state) âÂÂthe kingâ (absolute state, genitive). This might be called the âÂÂHebrewâ way of expression (bÃÂt hammelek).
The construct state is also the basic form used when a personal pronoun is suffixed: malakà «ma = âÂÂ(the) kingsâ (absolute state, nominative) > malakà « (construct state) > malakà «hu = âÂÂhis kingsâÂÂ; similarly malakéhu = âÂÂ(of) his kingsâ (genitive, accusative).
Ugaritic, unlike Arabic and Hebrew, has no definite article.
Nouns which have no gender marker are for the most part masculine, although some feminine nouns do not have a feminine marker. However, these denote feminine beings such as üumm- (mother). /-t/ is the feminine marker which is directly attached to the base of the noun.
Ugaritic distinguishes between nouns based on quantity. All nouns are either singular when there is one, dual when there are two, and plural if there are three or more.
The singular has no marker and is inflected according to its case.
The marker for the dual in the absolute state appears as /-m/. However, the vocalization may be reconstructed as /-ÃÂma/ or /-ÃÂmi/ in the nominative (such as malkÃÂma, malkÃÂmi "two kings") and /-êma/ or /-êmi/ for the genitive and accusative (e.g. malkêma, malkêmi). For the construct state, it is /-ÃÂ/ and /-ê/ respectively.
Masculine absolute state plurals take the forms -à «ma in the nominative and -ëma in the genitive and accusative. In the construct state they are -à « and -ë respectively. There are a few irregular (or broken) plurals; for example bt (bêtu), âÂÂhouseâÂÂ, plural bhtm (bahatà «ma); and bn (binu), âÂÂsonâÂÂ, plural banà «ma (with Ablaut).
The female afformative plural is /-ÃÂt/ with a case marker probably following the /-t/, giving /-ÃÂtu/ for the nominative and /-ÃÂti/ for the genitive and accusative in both absolute and construct state.
Adjectives follow the noun and are declined exactly like the preceding noun.
Independent personal pronouns in Ugaritic are as follows (some forms are lacking because they are not in the corpus of the language):
Suffixed (or enclitic) pronouns (mainly denoting the genitive and accusative) are as follows:
The relative (or âÂÂdeterminativeâÂÂ) pronoun is d (dà «), âÂÂthat of, of whichâÂÂ; often simply translatable as âÂÂwho, whichâÂÂ. It introduces a specification, property, or action by the subject and is congruent with the governing noun. Declension: dë, dÃÂ; feminine dt (dÃÂtu, dÃÂti, dÃÂta); plural dt (dà «tu, dà «ti(?)).
The demonstrative (or âÂÂdeicticâÂÂ) pronouns are hnd (hÃÂnÃÂdà «), âÂÂthisâÂÂ, and hnk (hÃÂnÃÂkÃÂ) âÂÂthatâÂÂ. Extended forms are hanadà «na, hanadà «ti, hanamati.
Interrogative pronouns are my (mëyu) âÂÂwho?âÂÂ, and mh (maha) âÂÂwhat?âÂÂ.
Indefinite pronouns seem to be derived from the interrogative pronoun by appending to them the particles -n(a)-, -k(a), and/or -m(a) (in that order). Thus, for example: mnkm (mënukumu?) and mnm (mënama?) âÂÂanyone, someoneâÂÂ, mhkm (mahkëma?) and mnm (mannama?) âÂÂanything, something, whateverâÂÂ.
The following is a table of Ugaritic numerals (some vocalisations are conjectural):
Numerals are declined just like other nouns, for example áµÂarbaá¶Âu (âÂÂ4âÂÂ): genitive áµÂarbaá¶Âi, accusative áµÂarbaá¶Âa.
The following is a table of Ugaritic ordinals. The vocalisations (predominantly based on comparison with Hebrew, Aramaic and Arabic) are very uncertain:
Among particles in Ugaritic the so-called enclitic particles deserve special note, especially -n (-na) and -m (-ma). These particles do not seem to change the meaning of words, but create confusion between different forms, and thus complicate the analysis and interpretation of words, in particular verbal forms. For example, rgmtm can be ragamtumu, âÂÂyou (plural) sayâÂÂ, but it can also be ragamtu-ma, an extension of ragamtu, âÂÂI have saidâÂÂ. And mlkm (malkuma), can be the plural malkûma, âÂÂkingsâÂÂ, but it can also be an extended singular, malku-ma, âÂÂthe kingâÂÂ.
The enclitic particles can be stacked on top of each other. An extreme example is hnny (hannaniya), âÂÂbehold!, here isâÂÂ, that is analyzed as a four-step extension of the presentative particle h (ha): hnny (hannaniya) = ha + -n + -na + -ni + -ya. h and hnny have the same meaning, âÂÂbehold!, here isâÂÂ.
Techniques often encountered in Ugaritic poetry are repetition, parallelisms, chiasms, and what might be called âÂÂnumerical stairsâÂÂ.
An example of repetition is in a part of the BaâÂÂal myth cycle, where BaâÂÂalâÂÂs fight with the Sea god Yammu (also known as Naharu) is described (KTU 1.2, tablet 2, col. 4). Divine artisan Kothar makes a magic mace for BaâÂÂal and, speaking to the mace, instructs it what to do:
The phrase is repeated, with subtle variation, to describe the fight:
When the fight ends in a draw, Kothar makes a second mace for BaâÂÂal. This mace too is instructed:
The fight is then described thus:
This time BaâÂÂal indeed succeeds in killing Yammu.
In the quoted section several parallelisms may be noted: âÂÂshoulderâ // âÂÂbetween the armsâÂÂ; âÂÂheadâ // âÂÂbetween the eyesâÂÂ; âÂÂPrinceâ // âÂÂRulerâÂÂ; and Yammu // Naharu.
An example of a chiasm is (DanâÂÂil curses vultures after he has found out that they have scavenged the body of his dead son Aqhat):
âÂÂNumerical stairsâ or âÂÂprogressions of numbersâ are of the form âÂÂN (times) X, N+1 (times) YâÂÂ, or âÂÂ100 (times) X, 1000 (times) YâÂÂ. An example, where the huge size of KirtaâÂÂs army is portrayed:
Here is a fragment from the epic âÂÂBaalâ cycle (KTU tablet 1.4 column 5). BaâÂÂal, son of Supreme God El, has rebelled, he wants a palace of his own. After some blackmail â BaâÂÂal withholds his rain from the land â El agrees. BaâÂÂal's sister Anat brings him the good news:
From a list describing the organization of wine deliveries for royal sacrificial rites (KTU 1.91). Wine is to be consumed when ...:
From a letter legally confirming the manumission of a royal slave (KTU 2.19):
An official document, bearing the seal of king Niqmaddu (II), stating the conditions of a so-called âÂÂredemptionü (KTU 3.4):