Results 91 to 100 of about 4,216 (218)
'Look it up in…'? Aramaic Lexicography Some General Observations
It is astounding how few dictionaries have been published for Aramaic in the last century. The standard dictionaries such as Payne Smith, Jastrow and Levy are all about a century or more old.
Theodore Kwasman
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The Aramaic Dialect of the James Ossuary Inscription
Discussion of the Aramaic used in the James Ossuary inscription has so far been limited to whether the Aramaic grammatical forms could be found in the first century. There is a little evidence that supports a positive answer.
Paul Flesher
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The aim of this study is to single out possible intertextual connections between the Song of Hannah in the Targums to the Prophets and the Aramaic section of the Book of Daniel.
Daniel Olariu
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The Assyrian and Aramaic Texts from Tell Shiukh Fawqani [PDF]
Fales, Frederick Mario +7 more
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The Causative Internal Passive in Qumran Aramaic
Although the prevailing vocalism of the Aramaic causative internal passive is thought to be ‘Hophʿal’, there is some evidence for an alternative vocalism with short /a/ in the first syllable, therefore ‘Haphʿal’.
Edward M. Cook
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Verb movement in Biblical Aramaic: Introduction
From text: The activity in which you are engaged at this moment is reading and understanding an English sentence which you have never seen before and may well never see again. You may ask, how is it possible to understand a sentence which has never been
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Relativization in Aramaic-Syriac
This paper is a preliminary approach to relativization in Syriac, which is a dialect of Aramaic, a Semitic language of the Afro-Asiatic family. This study will concentrate on the morpheme ‘d-’ as a “relative morpheme”.
Skaf, Roula
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The Aramaic Dialect(s) of the Toldot Yeshu Fragments
The Aramaic fragments of the Toldot Yeshu have long been recognized as the oldest version of this polemical tradition which was translated, and elaborated, into many other languages, and transmitted throughout the centuries after its inception.
Willem Smelik
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The Verbal System of Biblical Aramaic: A Distributional Approach
Grammarians have been unable to provide a sufficient explanation for the verbal system of Biblical Aramaic by means of the standard categories of tense and aspect. Michael B.
Shepherd, Michael B.
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Akkadian substrate words and meanings surfacing in Neo-Aramaic
The present article concerns twelve cases of Akkadian lexical influences on Aramaic that are not manifest until the modern period. These are added to several cases already discussed in scholarly works, and include ten substrate words and two loan ...
Hezy Mutzafi
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