Tarcite

Tarcite (Taresiyya, Classical Syriac: ܛܪܤܝ) is a language that originated among ancient Tharsus tribe, a group of Semitic-speaking Japhetites in modern-day Turkey, at the beginning of the 1st millennium BC, and later became a prominent language in the Balkans during the rise of the Ottoman Empire. During its three thousand years long history, Tarcite went through several stages of development. It has served as a language of public life and administration of some ancient Christian ethnoreligious groups and as a language of divine worship and religious study. It subsequently evolved into the modern Tarcite dialect that is still spoken in modern times.

Form I: Basic forms (Al-Gamaħ adħil Al-)
Form one is generally assigned to nominal forms of a triconsonantal root.
 * K-T-B (writing)
 * M-L-K (ruling, royalty)
 * '-M-M (mother, childcare)
 * Š-L-M (peace, agape)

Form II: Intensive, declarative, causative (Al-Gamaħ adħil Al-)
Form II is for verbs associated with intensity, declaring ascription, and causation or mandate.
 * K-T-B
 * M-L-K
 * R-G-L (walking)
 * X-Ħ-Q (laughter)