Results 141 to 150 of about 6,354 (214)
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Cyana arama subsp. arama arama (Moore 1859
2021Published as part of Singh, Navneet, Joshi, Rahul, Kirti, Jagbir Singh, Bisht, Santosh Singh & Param, Harsimranjeet Singh, 2021, A catalogue of Indian Arctiinae (Erebidae, Lepidoptera), pp.
Singh, Navneet +4 more
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Cyana arama subsp. arama arama (Moore 1859
2020Cyana arama arama (Moore, 1859) (Figs 120–123, 219, 276) Bizone arama Moore in Horsfield & Moore, 1859, A catalogue of the lepidopterous insects in the Museum of Natural History at the East-India House 2: 306, pl. 79, fig. 10 (Type locality: “Darjeeling”).
Singh, Navneet +4 more
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Verbal Serialization in Biblical Aramaic
Altorientalische Forschungen, 2020The present paper discusses the issue of Serial Verb Constructions (SVCs) in Biblical Aramaic within the dynamic grammaticalization-based model of verbal serialization – a recent modification of a prototype-driven approach to SVCs used in linguistic ...
Alexander Andrason
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Scripta Classica Israelica, 2020
This article looks at the long intertwined relationship between Aramaic and Arabic across nearly 3000 years. In particular, it points out that Arabic was written down centuries before the rise of Islam, much earlier than is usually supposed, and that ...
R. Hoyland
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This article looks at the long intertwined relationship between Aramaic and Arabic across nearly 3000 years. In particular, it points out that Arabic was written down centuries before the rise of Islam, much earlier than is usually supposed, and that ...
R. Hoyland
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The Neo-Aramaic Dialects of Iran
Iranian Studies, 2020Spoken vernacular dialects of Aramaic, generally known as Neo-Aramaic dialects, have survived down to modern times in various regions of the Middle East and can be divided into various subgroups. There are some islands of Neo-Aramaic in the West of Iran,
G. Khan
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The Month ʾdr in Safaitic and the Status of Spirantisation in ‘Arabian’ Aramaic
, 2020This article discusses the status of spirantisation in the Aramaic of Arabia based on transcriptions in Safaitic and other ancient Arabian languages.
A. Al‐Jallad
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, 2020
Several verbal morphologies including the core orthography {ld} are attested in ninth- and eighth-century bce Aramaic texts from Sefire and Tell Fekheriyeh.
M. Richey
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Several verbal morphologies including the core orthography {ld} are attested in ninth- and eighth-century bce Aramaic texts from Sefire and Tell Fekheriyeh.
M. Richey
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Aramaic Studies, 2018
The ethical dative (dativus ethicus) has been attested without interruption in Aramaic dialects from the Official Aramaic period down through Neo-Aramaic. The extent and durability of this linguistic feature is discussed.
S. Fassberg
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The ethical dative (dativus ethicus) has been attested without interruption in Aramaic dialects from the Official Aramaic period down through Neo-Aramaic. The extent and durability of this linguistic feature is discussed.
S. Fassberg
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Sanitized Sacrifice in Aramaic Levi’s Law of the Priesthood
, 2020Most studies of the law of the priesthood in Aramaic Levi have focused on comparing its individual laws to those in the Torah/Pentateuch. This article argues that these types of comparisons are anachronistic and obscure the distinctive portrayal of ...
Liane M. Feldman
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Qumran Aramaic, Corpus Linguistics, and Aramaic Retroversion
Dead Sea Discoveries, 2014The Aramaic of Qumran is sometimes claimed to be the best or only Aramaic dialect to use for understanding the Aramaic background of the New Testament. In fact, although it has its uses, the corpus of Qumran Aramaic is very small, and it is not a sufficient source on its own for the purposes of back-translating portions of the New Testament into ...
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