Results 11 to 20 of about 302 (115)

La masora y el intercambio de laríngeas

open access: yesSefarad : Revista de Estudios Hebraicos y Sefardíes, 1992
Se presenta el estudio de tres palabras bíblicas con una radical laríngea que han sido transmitidas por algunas versiones, manuscritos, comentarios o traducciones con intercambio de su radical laríngea por otra radical, también laríngea.
M.ª J. de Azcárraga
doaj   +7 more sources

The Vocalization, Accentuation and Masora of Codex Or. 4445 (Brit. Mus.) and Their Place in the Development of the Tiberian Masora. [PDF]

open access: yes, 1983
Or. 4445 (Brit. Mus.) is a Tiberian Pentateuch copy, vocalized and annotated by a certain Nissi B. Daniel at the beginning of the 10th century C.E. The vocalization and accents are accurately marked, reflecting in the main the norms and tendencies of Aaron Ben-Aser in the model Aleppo Codex. Vowel-switches and omissions are of very sporadic occurrence.
Lyons, David Lloyd
openaire   +3 more sources

El Sefer ’Oḵlȃ wĕ-’Oḵlȃ y la masora magna del códice de Profetas de El Cairo

open access: yesSefarad : Revista de Estudios Hebraicos y Sefardíes, 1995
El Sefer ’Oḵlȃ wĕ-’Oḵlȃ es uno de los tratados masoréticos independientes -es decir, que no va acompañando al texto bíblico- más importantes que se conservan. Existen dos ediciones (S. Frensdorff y F.
María Teresa Ortega Monasterio   +1 more
doaj   +3 more sources

Masorah of the Hebrew Bible – introduction into the problem

open access: yesRuch Biblijny i Liturgiczny, 2012
Masorah (oral and written tradition of transmitting the Bible text) is an important library of information about Sacred Scripture on the stage of its formation.
Marcin Majewski
doaj   +4 more sources

Using the Masora for Interpreting the Vocalisation and Accentuation of the Biblical Text

open access: yes, 2022
The marginal annotations that appear with the biblical text in most medieval biblical manuscripts—called by the technical term Masora—are hardly taken into account when interpreting the biblical text. Their idiosyncratic characteristics (they are formulated briefly, concisely, and, on many occasions, elliptically) make it nearly impossible to ...
Martín Contreras, Elvira
openaire   +2 more sources

Is the Masora Circule, too, among the Scribal Habits? [PDF]

open access: yesTyndale Bulletin, 2020
Research into masoretic biblical manuscripts (MSS) is heavily reliant on our ability to reunite fragments once belonging to the same codex, now separated one from the other in the Genizah morass, and to identify the scribes behind codices whose colophons
Kim Phillips
doaj   +2 more sources

Was There Ever an Oral Hebrew Masora?

open access: yes
The essay challenges the existence of an oral Hebrew Masora that purportedly preceded the written Masora. The concept of an oral Masora originated in the 16th century, when Jacob ben Hayyim and Elías Levita proposed that all Masoretic statements were laws given to Moses at Sinai and passed down orally until written down by Ezra and the Tiberian sages ...
Martín Contreras, Elvira
openaire   +2 more sources

Utopia, armarium codicum bibliophilorum, cod. 6 (JUD040) : Bible with Masora magna and Masora parva

open access: yes
Sephardic Bible in Hebrew, produced in the first half of the 14th century in Spain, probably in Castile. The manuscript opens and closes with Masoretic lists (ff. IIr-IXv and 463v to 466v), which, framed by illuminated borders, form “carpet pages”. The biblical text, copied into one or two columns, is accompanied by the Small and Large Masora (rules ...
Boton, Abraham ben Moses di
openaire   +2 more sources

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