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Linguistics and Biblical Hebrew
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About This Book
The essays in this volume arose out of the Society of Biblical Literature section on linguistics and Biblical Hebrew and have been selected to provide a summary and statement of the state of the question with regard to a number of areas of investigation. The sixteen articles are organized into sections on phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, discourse analysis, historical/comparative linguistics, and graphemics.
Our Review
This collection of sixteen scholarly essays provides a comprehensive overview of contemporary linguistic approaches to Biblical Hebrew, systematically organized from phonology and morphology through to discourse analysis and graphemics. Emerging from the Society of Biblical Literature's dedicated section, the volume represents a curated snapshot of the field's most pressing questions, offering readers a structured entry point into the complex intersection of modern linguistics and ancient text. It serves as both a summary of established thought and a map of ongoing scholarly debates, making the specialized discipline accessible.
What distinguishes this work is its methodological breadth, tackling the language's structure at every level from the sounds of its words to the architecture of its narratives. The anthology is particularly valuable for students and scholars seeking to move beyond traditional grammatical paradigms and engage with the analytical tools of modern linguistics. By consolidating diverse research threads into a single, organized framework, it provides an indispensable foundation for anyone serious about applying rigorous linguistic theory to the study of Biblical Hebrew texts.
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