A Modern Grammar for Biblical Hebrew
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A Modern Grammar for Biblical Hebrew

Duane A. Garrett, Jason S. DeRouchie

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eBook - ePub

A Modern Grammar for Biblical Hebrew

Duane A. Garrett, Jason S. DeRouchie

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A Modern Grammar for Biblical Hebrew is a complete revision of Duane Garrett's respected 2002 release originally entitled A Modern Grammar for Classical Hebrew. In addition to the revisions and contributions from new coauthor Jason DeRouchie, the book now includes the answer key for an all-new companion workbook and an updated vocabulary list for second year Hebrew courses.

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Informations

Éditeur
B&H Academic
Année
2019
ISBN
9781087703497

Chapter 1The Hebrew Alphabet and Vowels

The Hebrew alphabet consists entirely of consonants, the first being Ś (Aleph) and the last being ŚȘ (Taw). The standard script for biblical Hebrew is called the square or Aramaic script. Modern Hebrew uses a wide variety of scripts.

A. The Consonants

1. The Letters of the Alphabet

To master the Hebrew alphabet, first learn the signs, their names, and their alphabetical order.
Table 1.1. The Hebrew Alphabet
1 Ś Aleph 7 Ś– Zayin 13 Śž Mem 19 Ś§ Qoph
2 Ś‘ Beth 8 Ś— Heth 14 Ś  Nun 20 Śš Resh
3 Ś’ Gimel 9 Ś˜ Teth 15 ŚĄ Samek 21 Ś©Ś‚ Sin
4 Ś“ Daleth 10 Ś™ Yod 16 Śą Ayin 22 Ś©Ś Shin
5 Ś” Hey 11 Ś› Kaph 17 Ś€ Pe 23 ŚȘ Taw
6 Ś• Waw 12 Śœ Lamed 18 ŚŠ Tsade
The alphabet has 23 letters, but in biblical times Ś©Ś‚ (Sin) and Ś©Ś (Shin) were counted as one letter, and thus it had 22 letters. It is written from right to left, so that in the word written ŚŚ©Ś, the letter Ś is first and the letter Ś©Ś is last.

2. Letters with Final Forms

Five letters have final forms. Whenever one of these letters is the last letter in a word, it is written in its final form rather than its normal form. For example, the final form of ŚŠ (Tsade) is Ś„. Both forms represent the same letter; it is simply written differently if it is the last letter in the word. The five final forms are as follows.
Table 1.2. Consonants with Final Forms
Normal Form Ś› Śž Ś  Ś€ ŚŠ
Final Form ŚšÖ° Ś ŚŸ ŚŁ Ś„
  1. In ŚžŚœŚšÖ° (mlk), Śž (the first letter, reading right to left) has the normal form, but the last letter in the word is Ś› in its final form (ŚšÖ°).
  2. In ŚœŚ›Ś (lkm), Ś› has the normal form, but Śž has the final form (Ś).
Blackboard 1.1
Blackboard 1.1. The Use of Final Forms of Letters

3. Confusing Letters

Hebrew can be difficult to read because many letters look similar. Observe the letters in the following chart. In each box, you see a series of letters that look like one another. Be sure that you can distinguish which letter is which.
Table 1.3. Easily Confused Letters
ŚŠ Śą Ś Ś˜ Śž ŚĄ ŚŸ Ś– Ś• Ś™ ŚšÖ° Śš Ś“
Ś€ Ś› Ś‘ ŚȘ Ś— Ś” Ś• Ś’ Ś 

4. The Phonetic Value of the Alphabet

For learning the alphabet, Hebrew consonants can be divided conveniently into six groups: begadkephat letters, sibilants, Ś˜ and Ś§, gutturals, liquids, and nasals. These six groups are not built around phonetic definitions. They simply provide a framework for learning to pronounce the letters of the Hebrew alphabet.

a. Begadkephat Letters

Referred to as the begadkephat letters, the letters Ś‘, Ś’, Ś“, Ś›, Ś€, and ŚȘ are unique in that each has two distinct phonetic values. Each of these may be found with a dot called a Daghesh Lene (Ś‘ÖŒ) or without the Daghesh Lene (Ś‘).
  1. If the Daghesh Lene is present, the letter is a plosive, like the English P or B.
  2. If there is no Daghesh Lene, the sound is a fricative or spirant (there is a breathing sound, as with the English F sound).
  3. Do not think of the begadkephat letters as twelve different letters. There are only six, each with or without the Daghesh Lene.
  4. The Daghesh Lene is used only with these six letters.
  5. In a given word the same begadkephat letter will be written sometimes with and sometimes without a Daghesh Lene, according to rules we will learn in the next chapter.
Table 1.4. The “Begadkephat” Letters
With Daghesh Lene
Ś‘ÖŒ Ś’ÖŒ Ś“ÖŒ Ś›ÖŒ Ś€ÖŒ ŚȘÖŒ
B G D K P T
boy good dot kite paste tin
Without Daghesh Lene
Ś‘ Ś’ Ś“ Ś› Ś€ ŚȘ
V GH voiced C F unvoiced
very dog TH cool fix TH
house then thin

b. The Gutturals

Hebrew has four guttural letters: Ś, Śą, Ś”, and Ś—. The sounds of these letters are made at the back of the throat. For English speakers, the “sound” of...

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