DOI: 10.67469/ehj2026.1.1.5 ISSN: 3122-8879

Proto-Slavic čьrta and Semitic ś-r-ṭ: Semantic Convergence

Željko Stanojević

The Proto-Slavic noun čьrtais traditionally derived from the lexical family čersti / čьrtǫ / čьrtatiand is ultimately connected with the Proto-Indo-European root (s)ker-‘to cut, carve’. At the same time, the Semitic root ś-r-ṭis attested in Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac, Akkadian, andArabic with meanings related to cutting, incising, scratching, and leaving a visible mark. Of particular significance is the Aramaic-Syriac semantic development in which meanings associated with incision gradually expanded into the domains of line, stroke, text line, graphic mark, and written sign.This study examines the degree of formal, semantic, chronological, and historical correspondence between the Proto-Slavic lexical family čьrta / čьrtatiand the Semitic root ś-r-ṭ. The analysis combines comparative philology, historical semantics, and the critical evaluation of linguistic evidence. In addition to Slavic and Semitic material, Iranian evidence is employed as a control corpus in order to assess whether comparable semantic developments may arise independently in different linguistic traditions.The results demonstrate that both lexical families exhibit a documented semantic trajectory extending from cutting and incision to line, mark, and graphic representation. However, the available evidence does not establish either a direct etymological relationship or a demonstrable borrowing process between the Semitic and Proto-Slavic forms. Instead, the data support the existence of a noteworthy pattern of semantic convergence whose broader historical significance warrants further comparative investigation.

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