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Recent Articles
- A Call to Listen: A Beginner’s Guide to Hebrew Grammar in Jeremiah 10:1
- “Even If I Wash with Snow”: Job’s Cry of Purity and Futility in Hebrew
- Your People and Your Inheritance: Strength and Arm Between Hebrew and Greek
- Who is Abimelek? Political Defiance in Hebrew Speech
- May God Enlarge Japheth: Syntax, Blessing, and Subordination in Genesis 9:27
- The Plea of the Prophet: Syntax, Intercession, and Covenant Echoes in Deuteronomy 9:26
- The Swift Flight of Life: Syntax and Poetic Motion in Job 9:25
- Fear and Syntax in Giveʿon: Nested Clauses and Theological Strategy in Joshua 9:24
- Wayyiqtol Verbs, Ruach Imagery, and Political Betrayal in Judges 9:23
- Imperatives, Prophetic Syntax, and Stark Imagery in Jeremiah 9:22
- From Ashes to Dust: The Golden Calf in Hebrew Fire and Greek Fragmentation
- Fear and Obedience: How Hebrew “הֵנִיס” Becomes Greek “συνήγαγεν”
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2. Sketch of the History of the Hebrew Language
The history of the Hebrew language is a complex interplay of identity, sacred tradition, and linguistic evolution. Originally unnamed in the Old Testament, Hebrew was later termed יְהוּדִית (“the Jews’ language”) and ἑβραϊστί, although often used interchangeably with Aramaic. Rooted in the broader Canaanite linguistic sphere, Hebrew shares deep affinities with Phoenician but developed a standardized literary form remarkably consistent in consonantal structure. Early inscriptions like the Moabite Stone and Siloam Inscription provide rare glimpses into ancient usage. The language underwent two main periods—pre-exilic and post-exilic—marked by stylistic shifts and growing Aramaic influence.… Learn Hebrew
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1. The Semitic Languages in General
The Semitic languages form a vast, historically influential linguistic family originating in Western Asia, encompassing Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic, and the extinct tongues of Assyria, Phoenicia, and Babylonia. Spanning from the Mediterranean to southern Arabia and spreading as far as Carthage and Abyssinia, they are subdivided into four primary branches: South Semitic (Arabic and Ethiopian), Middle Semitic (Canaanitish), North Semitic (Aramaic), and East Semitic (Akkadian). These languages share core features—triliteral roots, consonantal emphasis, minimal compounding, and streamlined syntax—while varying in grammatical complexity and preservation.… Learn Hebrew
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