The Development of the Biblical Hebrew Vowels : Including a Concise Historical Morphology.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789004390263
- PJ4543 .S834 2020
Intro -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Exceptionless Sound Laws -- 1.1.1. Regular Sound Change -- 1.1.2. Analogy and Morphological Change -- 1.1.3. Irregular Sound Change -- 1.1.4. Summary -- 1.2. Biblical Hebrew -- 1.3. Proto-Northwest-Semitic -- 1.4. Some Previous Approaches to the Question -- 1.4.1. Brockelmann (1908) -- 1.4.2. Bergsträsser (1918) -- 1.4.3. Bauer and Leander (1922) -- 1.4.4. Birkeland (1940) -- 1.4.5. Dolgopolsky (1999) -- 1.4.6. Blau (2010) -- 1.5. Assumptions and Methodology -- 1.6. Outline and Conventions -- Chapter 2. Proto-Northwest-Semitic Phonology and Morphology -- 2.1. Phonology -- 2.1.1. Consonants -- 2.1.2. Vowels -- 2.1.3. Phonotactics and Stress -- 2.2. Morphology -- 2.2.1. Pronouns -- 2.2.2. Nouns and Adjectives -- 2.2.3. Verbs -- Chapter 3. The Canaanite Shift -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Previous Suggestions -- 3.2.1. Stress-Conditioned -- 3.2.2. Unconditioned -- 3.2.3. Bauer and Leander (1922) -- 3.2.4. Summary -- 3.3. Data -- 3.3.1. *ā > -- o -- 3.3.2. *aʔ > -- o -- 3.3.3. *ā > -- å -- 3.3.4. *aʔ > -- å -- 3.4. Analysis -- 3.5. Conclusion -- Chapter 4. Stress, Tonic, Pretonic, and Pausal Lengthening -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Stress -- 4.2.1. Phonemic Stress -- 4.2.2. 'Classical Arabic' Stress -- 4.2.3. Penultimate Stress -- 4.2.4. Challenges to the Penultimate Hypothesis -- 4.2.5. Remaining Issues -- 4.2.6. Conclusion on Stress -- 4.3. Tonic Lengthening -- 4.3.1. Extension of Pausal Forms -- 4.3.2. Different Accentuation -- 4.3.3. Compensatory Lengthening, Lengthening in Open Syllables -- 4.3.4. Remaining Issues -- 4.3.5. Conclusion on Tonic Lengthening -- 4.4. Pretonic Lengthening -- 4.4.1. 'Pretonic' Lengthening Due to Stress -- 4.4.2. Pretonic Lengthening Due to Language Contact.
4.4.3. The Conditioning of Pretonic Lengthening -- 4.4.4. Conclusion on Pretonic Lengthening -- 4.5. Pausal Lengthening -- 4.5.1. Major and Minor Pause -- 4.5.2. Dating -- 4.5.3. Conclusion on Pausal Lengthening -- 4.6. Summary -- Chapter 5. Diphthongs and Triphthongs -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Diphthongs -- 5.2.1. Previous Suggestions -- 5.2.2. Data -- 5.2.3. Analysis -- 5.2.4. Conclusion -- 5.3. Triphthongs -- 5.3.1. Previous Suggestions -- 5.3.2. Phonetics and Relative Dating of Triphthong Contraction -- 5.3.3. Conclusion -- 5.4. Summary -- Chapter 6. Philippi's Law and Other Cases of Stressed *i > -- *a -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Previous Suggestions -- 6.2.1. Philippi (1878) -- 6.2.2. Barth (1887, 1889) -- 6.2.3. Brockelmann (1908) and Bauer and Leander (1922) -- 6.2.4. Bergsträsser (1918, 1929) -- 6.2.5. Sarauw (1939) -- 6.2.6. Birkeland (1940) -- 6.2.7. Brønno (1943) -- 6.2.8. Blake (1950) -- 6.2.9. Rabin (1960b) -- 6.2.10. Blau (1981, 1986) -- 6.2.11. Lambdin (1985) -- 6.2.12. Qimron (1986b, 1991), Ben-Ḥayyim (1989) -- 6.2.13. Revell (1989) -- 6.2.14. Dolgopolsky (1999) -- 6.2.15. Woodhouse (2004, 2007) -- 6.2.16. Summary -- 6.3. Remaining Issues -- 6.3.1. The Construct State -- 6.3.2. The Imperative and Imperfect -- 6.3.3. *i before Geminates -- 6.4. Conclusion -- Chapter 7. The Law of Attenuation and Other Cases of Unstressed *a > -- *i -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Previous Suggestions -- 7.2.1. Brockelmann (1908) -- 7.2.2. Bauer and Leander (1922) -- 7.2.3. Blake (1950) -- 7.2.4. Rabin (1960b) -- 7.2.5. Harviainen (1977) -- 7.2.6. Lambdin (1985) -- 7.2.7. Huehnergard (1992) -- 7.2.8. Qimron and Sivan (1995) -- 7.2.9. Yuditsky (2010) -- 7.2.10. Summary -- 7.3. Remaining Issues -- 7.3.1. The nip̄ʕal Perfect Prefix -- 7.3.2. The qal Imperfect Prefix -- 7.3.3. *a >.
*i in *qaṭlum Nouns -- 7.3.4. Attenuation before l and r -- 7.4. Conclusion -- Chapter 8. Word-Final Vowels -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. Previous Suggestions -- 8.2.1. Anceps Vowels -- 8.2.2. Alternative Explanations -- 8.2.3. Anceps Revisited -- 8.2.4. Summary -- 8.3. Word-Final Vowels on Pronominal Suffixes and Verbal Endings -- 8.3.1. First Person Singular -- 8.3.2. First Person Plural -- 8.3.3. Second Person Singular -- 8.3.4. Second Person Plural -- 8.3.5. Third Person Singular -- 8.3.6. Third Person Plural -- 8.4. Conclusion -- Chapter 9. General Conclusion -- 9.1. Combined Relative Chronology -- 9.1.1. Sound Changes -- 9.1.2. Examples -- Appendix. A Concise Historical Morphology of Biblical Hebrew -- 1. Pronouns -- 2. Nouns and Adjectives -- 2.1. Roots with One or Two Radicals -- 2.2. *qVṭl(at)um (segolates) -- 2.3. *qV̆ṭV̆l((a)t)um -- 2.4. *qV̆ṭV̄l((a)t)um -- 2.5. *qVṭṭVl((a)t)um -- 2.6. *mVqṭVl((a)t)um -- 2.7. Miscellaneous -- 3. Numerals -- 4. Verbs -- 4.1. The Strong Verb -- 4.2. Guttural and Weak Verbs -- References -- Index of Hebrew Forms -- Index of Aramaic Forms -- Index of Ugaritic Forms -- Index of Arabic Forms -- Index of Gəʕəz Forms -- Index of Akkadian Forms -- Index of Miscellaneous Semitic Forms -- Index of Bible passages -- Subject Index.
In The Development of the Biblical Hebrew Vowels, Benjamin Suchard establishes phonetically regular sound laws comprehensively describing the Tiberian Biblical Hebrew reflexes of the Proto-Northwest-Semitic vowels.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
There are no comments on this title.