What Afro-Asiatic language subset is the closest to cushitic?

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I heard it’s either Egyptian or Semitic
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Apollo

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Mainly basing this on ancient influence to each other and not direct tree splits:

Omotic has the most Cushitic loanwords because of Sidamas and Oromos influencing them for a very long time. There is a thing called the Ethiopian sprachbund area.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethiopian_language_area

Chadic may be from North Chad or West Sudan originally. May have had direct ties with early Cushites.

Then maybe some ancient ties to Egyptian due to the geographic area the first Cushites were in.

Berber and Semitic, probably the least (Arabic and Ethiosemitic loanwords shouldn't count - too recent).
 

Samaalic Era

QurboExit
Mainly basing this on ancient influence to each other and not direct tree splits:

Omotic has the most Cushitic loanwords because of Sidamas and Oromos influencing them for a very long time. There is a thing called the Ethiopian sprachbund area.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethiopian_language_area

Chadic may be from North Chad or West Sudan originally. May have had direct ties with early Cushites.

Then maybe some ties to Egyptian due to the geographic area the first Cushites were in.

Berber and Semitic, probably the least (Arabic and Ethiosemitic loanwords shouldn't count).

I've seen a strong link between Af Somali and Ancient Egyptian in the most basic words
 
Proto-Semitic:

1sg. c. *ˀaḏkur
2sg. m./3sg. f. *taḏkur
2sg. f. *taḏkurī
3sg. m. *yaḏkur
2d. c. *taḏkurā
3d. c. *yaḏkurā
1pl. c. *naḏkur
2pl. m. *taḏkurū
2pl. f. *taḏkurna
3pl. m. *yaḏkurū
3pl. f. *yaḏkurna

And here is the prefix conjugation of the verb "to say" in Somali (one of the 5 irregular verbs that retain the prefix conjugation in this language):

1sg. c. idhi
2sg. m./ 3sg. f. tidhi
3sg. m. yidhi
1pl. c. nidhi
2pl. c. tidhahdeen
3pl. c. yidhahdeen

And finally here is the prefix conjugation of the verb "to kill" in Tamazight:

1sg. c. nɣiɣ
2sg. c. tnɣid
3sg. m. inɣa
3sg. f. tnɣa
1pl. c. nnɣa
2pl. m. tnɣam
2pl. f. tnɣant
3pl. m. nɣan
3pl. f. nɣant

As you can see, the languages Berber , Cushitic and Semitic share a considerable about of features not shared with other Afro-Asiatic branches.
 

Samaalic Era

QurboExit
Proto-Semitic:

1sg. c. *ˀaḏkur
2sg. m./3sg. f. *taḏkur
2sg. f. *taḏkurī
3sg. m. *yaḏkur
2d. c. *taḏkurā
3d. c. *yaḏkurā
1pl. c. *naḏkur
2pl. m. *taḏkurū
2pl. f. *taḏkurna
3pl. m. *yaḏkurū
3pl. f. *yaḏkurna

And here is the prefix conjugation of the verb "to say" in Somali (one of the 5 irregular verbs that retain the prefix conjugation in this language):

1sg. c. idhi
2sg. m./ 3sg. f. tidhi
3sg. m. yidhi
1pl. c. nidhi
2pl. c. tidhahdeen
3pl. c. yidhahdeen

And finally here is the prefix conjugation of the verb "to kill" in Tamazight:

1sg. c. nɣiɣ
2sg. c. tnɣid
3sg. m. inɣa
3sg. f. tnɣa
1pl. c. nnɣa
2pl. m. tnɣam
2pl. f. tnɣant
3pl. m. nɣan
3pl. f. nɣant

As you can see, the languages Berber , Cushitic and Semitic share a considerable about of features not shared with other Afro-Asiatic branches.
How come reer waqooyi dialect uses alot of dh instead of the R?

Like tiri instead of tidi for example
 
How come reer waqooyi dialect uses alot of dh instead of the R?

Like tiri instead of tidi for example

Not all Reer Waqooyi uses the DH more eastern regions use the R but it's just a dialectal difference just like how in the south they use Q instead of KH like Waqti not Wakhti.
 

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