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The Semantics of Silence in Biblical Hebrew: Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics, cartea 100

Autor Sonja Noll
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 noi 2019
In The Semantics of Silence in Biblical Hebrew, Sonja Noll explores the many words in biblical Hebrew that refer to being silent, investigating how they are used in biblical texts, Dead Sea Scrolls, and Ben Sira. She also examines the tradition of interpretation for these words in the early versions (Septuagint, Vulgate, Targum, Peshitta), modern translations, and standard dictionaries, revealing that meanings are not always straightforward and that additional work is needed in biblical semantics and lexicography. The traditional approach to comparative Semitics, with its over-simplistic assumption of semantic equivalence in cognates, is also challenged. The surprising conclusion of the work is that there is no single concept of silence in the biblical world; rather, it spans multiple semantic fields.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004414174
ISBN-10: 9004414177
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics


Cuprins

PrefaceList of FiguresAbbreviations
Introduction1What is Silence?2Silence in Modern Literature3Why Study Silence?4Silence in Biblical Hebrew

Part 1 Restraint


1 חרשׁ1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Biblical References: Grammatical and Semantic Analysis4Extrabiblical References5Cognate Evidence6Conclusion
2 אלם1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Biblical References: Grammatical and Semantic Analysis4Translations and Versions5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence7Semantic Field8Conclusion
3 חשׁה1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Biblical References: Grammatical and Semantic Analysis4Translations and Versions5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence7Conclusion

Part 2 Cessation


4 דמם/דום/דמה1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Grammatical Analysis4Semantic Analysis5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence and Post-biblical Hebrew7Conclusion
5 הס1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Grammatical Analysis4Semantic Analysis of Biblical References5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence7Onomatopoeia8Conclusion
6 שׁתק1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Grammatical and Semantic Analysis (Qal: Cease)4Versions5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence7Conclusion
7 סכת1Introduction2Lexicographical Survey3Grammatical and Semantic Analysis4Translations and Versions5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence7Relation to Other Hebrew Roots8Conclusion

Part 3 Related Meanings


8 Semantic Periphery of Silence
9 שׁקט1Distribution2Lexicographical Survey3Grammatical and Semantic Analysis4Versions and Translations5Extrabiblical References6Cognate Evidence7Conclusion and Semantic Field
Conclusion1Distribution2Representation of the Semantic Field3Further Research
BibliographyIndex of Hebrew WordsIndex of Scripture and Other Ancient LiteratureIndex of Subjects

Notă biografică

Sonja Noll, D.Phil. (2017), University of Oxford, teaches at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile in Santiago, having formerly taught at University College London. Her work has appeared in Vetus Testamentum and is forthcoming in the Journal of Semitic Studies.