Provides the fundamental features of the Tiberian Hebrew accents, focusing on their divisions and exegetical roles.
The three jobs of the accents -- The accents and sense, part one: the disjunctive accents -- The accents and sense, part two: the conjunctive accents -- The accents and exegesis -- The accents in the three.
both piel and hiphil forms of the transitive meaning of the verb. Another example of such a qal-piel pairing is לדגּ qal 'to be great' and לדּגּ or לדּגּ piel 'to magnify, glorify, praise someone or something', that is, ...
The book includes exercises that are drawn largely from the Hebrew Bible itself. Fourth printing, 2012.
Features of Basics of Biblical Hebrew Grammar, Second Edition text: * Combines the best of inductive and deductive approaches * Uses actual examples from the Hebrew Old Testament rather than 'made-up' illustrations * Emphasizes the ...
Each set contains four information-packed sheets that are laminated and three-hole-punched, making them both durable and portable. The study guides are tied to Zondervan's Basics of Biblical Greek and Basics of Biblical Hebrew.
It begins with the alphabet, and each new lesson builds on the ones before it. It is not, therefore, a synthetic Ugaritic grammar---these types of texts often prove to be overwhelming for students.
Slides and additional exercises (with solutions for lecturers) are also available through the book's supporting website to help course instructors prepare their lectures.
A new critical text for Proverbs drawing from many manuscripts This first volume of The Hebrew Bible: A Critical Edition series, features a critical text of Proverbs with extensive text-critical introductions and commentaries.
This workbook to Invitation to Biblical Hebrew: A Beginning Grammar by Russell T. Fuller and Kyoungwon Choi provides the student with additional drills, quizzes, and reviews not found in the textbook.
41. With # 7 , cf. Neh 9 : 3 . On the particle hnh , see D. J. McCarthy , “ The Uses of wohinnēh in Biblical Hebrew , ” Biblica 61 ( 1980 ) 330-42 . Examples ## 5–6 fit McCarthy's category of “ excited perception , ” pp . 332–33 . 42.