ISBN:
9789004299313
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (x, 211 pages)
Year of publication:
2015
Series Statement:
Studies on the texts of the desert of Judah volume 114
Series Statement:
Brill Biblical studies, Ancient Near East and early Christianity e-books online$acollection 2015
Series Statement:
Brill online books and journals: E-books
Series Statement:
Studies on the texts of the desert of Judah
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Hebrew of the late Second Temple period
Keywords:
Dead Sea scrolls Congresses
;
Bible Congresses Language, style
;
Hebrew language, Post-Biblical Congresses
;
Aufsatzsammlung
;
Hebräisch
;
Hellenismus
;
Hebrew language, Post-Biblical
;
Konferenzschrift
Abstract:
Preliminary Material -- Remarks on the Language of the Pesher Scrolls /Chanan Ariel and Alexey (Eliyahu) Yuditsky -- The Nature and Extent of Aramaisms in the Hebrew Dead Sea Scrolls /Steven E. Fassberg -- The Tiberian Vocalization and the Hebrew of the Second Temple Period /Jan Joosten -- Priests of Qoreb: Linguistic Enigma and Social Code in the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice /Noam Mizrahi -- The Nominal Clause in the Hebrew Legal Documents and Letters from the Judean Desert /Uri Mor and Tamar Zewi -- Aspects of the (Morpho)syntax of the Infinitive in Qumran Hebrew /Takamitsu Muraoka -- Syntactic Features es of כל in Qumran Hebrew /Jacobus A. Naudé and Cynthia L. Miller-Naudé -- Linguistic Observations on the Hebrew Prayer of Manasseh from the Cairo Genizah /Wido van Peursen -- The Nature of Qumran Hebrew as Revealed through Pesher Habakkuk /Gary A. Rendsburg -- “Dislocated Negations”: Negative אל Followed by a Non-verbal Constituent in Biblical, Ben Sira and Qumran Hebrew /Jean-Sébastien Rey -- Some Semantic Notes on the Lexeme מדהבה in the dss /Francesco Zanella -- Index of Modern Authors -- Index of Ancient Sources.
Abstract:
The Hebrew of the Late Second Temple Period is directly attested in the Scrolls from Qumran and other manuscripts discovered in the Judaean Desert. Indirectly, it is also found in some manuscripts copied in later times, which still preserve linguistic elements of the Hebrew from the period in which the texts were authored. Often referred to as the Hebrew of the Dead Sea Scrolls or Qumran Hebrew, and positioned chronologically between Biblical Hebrew and Mishnaic Hebrew, its nature remains disputed. Some essays in this volume deal with linguistic and philological problems of this Late Second Temple Period Hebrew. Other papers discuss the nature and linguistic profile of the Hebrew of the Dead Sea Scrolls
DOI:
10.1163/9789004299313
Permalink