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Discord between Tiberian Written and Reading Traditions: Two Case Studies

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Book chapter

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Authors

Hornkohl, Aaron Douglas 

Abstract

Aaron Hornkohl examines two features in the Tiberian reading tradition of Biblical Hebrew, namely the qal construct infinitive and the 3ms possessive suffix that is attached to plural nouns and some prepositions. The article argues that although the vocalisation in both cases is secondary relative to what is represented by the consonantal text, it is not artificial and post-biblical, but rather a relatively ancient product of the real language situation of an earlier period, namely, the Second Temple Period, if not earlier. The view that the vocalisation has such historical depth and is the result of natural linguistic development is often dismissed by biblical scholars. By examining the distribution of forms within the Tiberian Masoretic version of the Hebrew Bible and in extra-biblical sources, especially the Dead Sea Scrolls and First Temple period epigraphy, Hornkohl convincingly demonstrates that the incongruity between the vocalisation and the consonantal text is earlier than Rabbinic Hebrew (second–third centuries CE).

Description

Title

Discord between Tiberian Written and Reading Traditions: Two Case Studies

Keywords

Is Part Of

Studies in Semitic Vocalisation and Reading Traditions

Book type

Publisher

University of Cambridge & Open Book Publishers

ISBN

9781783749379