Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Hebew, Word Order, b (1998-10, or Summer 1997)

 2012-3-13 07:32



Hebew, Word Order, b (1998-10, or Summer 1997)

Appendix: Brief Hebrew Syntax According to IBHS1


Contents


    I. Clauses

        A. Word Order




Word Order [IBHS 8.3b]

    (1) verbal class [8.3b]; VSO, Verb Subj Obj;

        verb subject (VS): no introductory, waw-relative (consecutive), with adverbial
        waw-disjunctive, waw noun verb
        waw-adversative (in contrast), of waw-disjunctive
        Syntax of the Verbal Clause [Seow2 13.4]

            a. normal word order (NWO) [.a]

                Circumstance + Verb + Subject + Indirect Object + Direct Object
                IO ususally led by preposition l] or -la, 

            b. disrupted word order (DWO) in the prose [.b]

                i. a new subject
                ii. in parenthetical comments starting with waw
                iii. for emphasis
                iv. sharp contrast

    (2) verbless (or nominal) class [8.4]: (a substantive (N) and another expression except a verb)

        [.a] to identify subject: definite subject + definite predicate
        to classify subject: indefinite predicate + definite subject; S-P-IPP [16.3.3d; 8.4.2b]
        rarely, P-S, or P-pronoun-S [16.3.3d, p299]
        less predictable: predicate with suffix; subordinate or precative clause
        [.1a] subject-predicate (SP): identification, inteerogative, declaration [.a]
        S-pleo-Pred (pleo = pleonastic or dummy pronoun; copula [16.3.3a]), or
        Foc-S-pred (“as for Focus, ...” [16.3.3b]; unique subject/focus [16.3.3c])



A. Bibliography


    BDB: Brown, Francis. The New Brown - Driver - Briggs - Gesenius Hebrew and English Lexicon. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers. 1979
    IBHS: O’Connor, M.; Bruce K. Waltke. An Introduction to Biblical Hebrew Syntax. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1990
    Seow: Seow, Choon Leong. A Grammar for Biblical Hebrew. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press. 1995 rev



B. The Grammar of the Word Order


1. NWO: Normal Word Order [Seow 13.4a]
    Circumstance(sequent) - Verb - Subject - Indirect Object - Direct Object
2. DWO: Disrupted Word Order [Seow 13.4b]
    i. a new subject
    ii. in parenthetical comments starting with Waw
    iii. for emphasis
    iv. sharp contrast
3. VBL: Verbless clause [IBHS 8.4a]
    (S: Subject; P: Predicate; V:Verb; Adv: Adverb; Dat: Dative; Nom Abs: Nominative Absolute)
    i. to identify the subject (S-P): definite Subject - definite Predicate
    ii. - to classify the subject (P-S): indefinite Predicate - definite Subject - Pleonastic IPP [8.4.2b]
    iii. - (non-)existence (P-S): vyE / @yaE / hy;h; - nominative Subject [10.3.2b]
    iv. negation3 by adverb @ya (S-P): @ya - Subject - Predicate, (Subject - @ya - Predicate) [39.3.3b]

Hebrew Syntax

according to Seow’s “A Grammar for Biblical Hebrew” 1995


    p59, the verbless clause, [H] Proper-Noun B + Noun A => [E] A is B
    p149, Verbal Clause

        NWO : Normal Word Order in prose

            circumstance + verb + subject + indirect object + direct Object

        DWO: Disrupted Word Order

            new subjective; a redundant independent personal (IPP) (in parenthetical comments); for emphasis; contrast

        Agreement of subject

            in gender, number, person (GNP)
            collective nouns + singular/plural verb; 
            nouns of plural form but singular meaning + singular verb; 
            a noun list + plural/singualr verb



1 O’Connor, M.; Bruce K. Waltke. An Introduction to Biblical Hebrew Syntax. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1990

2 Seow, Choon Leong. A Grammar for Biblical Hebrew. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press. 1995 rev.

3 B.1.iv) In a different view of negation in verbless clause @ya and vye can serve as the negative and positive substantive of hyh [BDB p34: @ya 2.c, 5; p441: vye 2.a; p226: hyh III.1 ] , and they function as hyh does as “to come to pass” followed by a clause [BDB p224: hyh I.2 ]. The subject in the pattern “Subject @ya Predicate” is a nominative absolute in a verbless clause. Furthermore, the verbless clause is an incomplete clause without any finite verb (even without either subject or predicate), but it has as an emphatic or explanatory function upon a certain aspect (usually the subject or action) of an even. According to Seow 10.4, @ya functions as the particle of non-existence in the first position of a clause, and the particle of absence in the second position. This classification is better because the meaning of non-existence is closer to absence than negation even though @ya rarely appears in the second position when it serves as the particle of non-existence .


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