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Studies in Hebrew and Aramaic Orthography

 

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Studies in Hebrew and Aramaic Orthography

What is orthography?

The orthography of a language is the set of rules of how to write correctly in the language. The term is derived from Greek ορθο ortho- ("correct") and γραφος graphos ("that writes") and, in today's sense, includes spelling and punctuation. Orthography is distinct from typography.

An example of an orthographic rule for English is:

A vowel that is not preceded immediately by another vowel, and that is followed by an "E" at the end of the word, without any other vowels between that vowel and the "E", may represent the "long" sound of the vowel. (This is the pronunciation rule "final E makes the vowel long" restated as a spelling rule.) (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.)

Why Hebrew and Aramaic Orthography?

This book introduces the student to the textual study of the Hebrew Bible—to help such a student "perceive the work of the numberless and nameless scribes torn between tradition and fashion in their restrained attempts to update the orthography of Scripture." Sixteen essays serve as the bridge from older methods for the study of orthography to newer ones, using the computer to analyze large bodies of text.

More information on Hebrew resources can be found in the Product Guide on Hebrew Texts and Tools.

Additional Information

Series: Biblical and Judaic Studies from the University of California, San Diego (BJSUCSD 2)
Authors: David Noel Freedman, A. Dean Forbes, and Francis I. Andersen
Publisher: Eisenbrauns
Copyright 1992; 328 pages

Praise for the Print Edition

"It indeed makes for interesting reading."

– Gary A. Rendsburg, Cornell University
in Journal of Biblical Literature (113/2, 1994)

"Everything you could possibly want to know about the orthography of biblical Hebrew and Aramaic. And more. Users of this volume may find particular pleasure and enlightenment in its concluding appendix ('What Did the Scribes Count?'), wherein the verse, word, and number counts of the Masoretes and others are freshly examined to great effect."

– Leonard J. Greenspoon, Oxford Centre
in Religious Studies Review (Vol. 19, No. 4, Oct. 1993)

Table of Contents

PREFACE

SIGLA

I. BACKGROUND

1. THE EVOLUTION OF HEBREW ORTHOGRAPHY - David Noel Freedman

1.1 Introduction

1.2 Phase I: Pure Consonantism

1.3 Phase II: Vowel Letters

1.4 Phase III: Post-exilic Orthography

1.4.1 Archaic Hebrew Spelling (AHS)

1.4.2 Standard Hebrew Spelling (AHS)

1.4.3 Hellenistic Hebrew Spelling (AHS)

1.5 Conclusion

2. A TUTORIAL ON METHOD: A GUIDE FOR THE STATISTICALLY PERPLEXED - A. Dean Forbes

2.1 One More Time

2.2 Finding Spelling Patterns

2.3 Grouping Copies of Copies

2.4 Hebrew Spelling

2.5 Data Preparation

2.5.1 Which Text?

2.5.2 What Might Determine Spelling?

Vowel Type

Vowel Stress

Text Portion

Word Aesthetics

Word Proximity

Local Frequency

2.5.3 The Mechanics of Data Preparation

Identifying Vowels Having Fixed Spelling

Labeling Vowels

2.6 Methods of Data Analysis

2.7 Results

2.7.1 A Helpful Analogy

2.7.2 Possible Effects of Transmission

Error-free Theory

Indifference Theory

Mixed Theory

2.7.3 Examples of Portion and Spelling Choice Association

David

The Object Marker

2.8 Hierarchical Clustering

2.8.1 A Geographical Example

2.8.2 Text Clustering Based on Spelling Practice

2.9 Where Matters Stand

3. REVIEW: MT SPELLING AND STATISTICS - Francis I. Andersen & A. Dean Forbes

3.1 Survey of Our Previous Work

3.1.1 Background Materials

3.1.2 Preparing the Data for Analysis

3.1.3 Analyses of Spelling Practice

3.2 Further Explanation

3.2.1 Successive Plene Vowels

3.2.2 The Effects of Markov Chains

3.2.3 Outliers and Their Detection

3.3 Tables of Types, Portions, & Outliers

II. EXTENSIONS

4. THE SPELLING OF SUFFIXES - Francis I. Andersen

4.1 More on Terminal a

4.2 Suffix 'his'

4.3 Nouns Ending in -an and -on

5. THE SPELLING OF O AND E - Francis I. Andersen

5.1 Historical Development

5.2 Biblical Spelling

5.3 Qumran Spelling

6. ARCHAIC, STANDARD, AND LATE SPELLING - Francis I. Andersen

6.1 The Problem of Dating

6.2 Phases in Biblical Spelling

7. ALEPH AS A VOWEL LETTER IN OLD ARAMAIC

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Items Excluded

7.3 Paths of Development

7.4 Conclusions

III. ADVANCES

8. CHOICE OF STATISTICAL METHODS - A. Dean Forbes

8.1 The Basic Approach

8.2 Distance Measures

8.3 Clustering Algorithms

8.4 Multidimensional Scaling

9. SPELLING IN PARALLEL PASSAGES - Francis I. Andersen & A. Dean Forbes

9.1 Source-Encoder-Channel Equations

9.2 Choice of Parallel Texts

9.3 Behavior of Corresponding Vowels

9.4 Intra-book Parallels

9.5 Inter-book Parallels

10. THE SERIATION OF PORTIONS - A. Dean Forbes

10.1 The Cluster or to Seriate?

10.2 Seriation by Multidimensional Scaling

10.3 The Abundance Matrix for Spelling

10.4 From Abundances to Seriation

IV. DOCUMENTS

11. THE SPELLING OF THE ARAMAIC PORTION OF THE TELL FEKHERYE BILINGUAL - Francis I. Andersen & David Noel Freedman

11.1 Introduction

11.2 The Basic Data

11.3 The Inventory of Words

11.4 Summary

11.5 Conclusions

11.5.1 Final Vowels

11.5.2 Medial Vowels

A Notable Exception

11.5.3 Diphthongs

12. THE SPELLING OF SAMARIA PAPYRUS 1 - David Noel Freedman & Francis I. Andersen

12.1 Introduction

12.2 The Evidence

12.3 Conclusions

12.4 Summary

13. ANOTHER LOOK AT 4QSAM -Francis I. Andersen & David Noel Freedman

13.1 The Evidence

13.1.1 Fragment 1 (1Sa 16:1-11)

13.1.2 Fragment 2 (1 Sa 19:10-17)

13.1.3 Fragments 3 and 4 (1 Sa 21:3-10)

13.1.4 Fragments 5 and 6 (1 Sa 23:9-17)

13.2 Summary

13.2.1 Invariant Spellings

13.2.2 Standard Spellings

13.2.3 Spellings in 4QSam

13.3 Conclusions

14. THE ORTHOGRAPHY OF 4QTESTIMONIA - Francis I. Andersen & David Noel Freedman

14.1 Introduction

14.2 Procedure

14.3 Inventory: Deuteronomy 5:28-29

14.4 Inventory: Deuteronomy 18:18-19

14.5 Inventory: Numbers 24:15-17

14.6 Inventory: Deuteronomy 33:8-11

14.7 Discussion

14.8 Excursus: in 4QTestim

14.9 Final Comment

15. THE ORTHOGRAPHY OF D62 - Francis I. Andersen

15.1 The Codex from Karasu-Bazar

15.2 The Text

15.3 Codicology

15.4 Palaeography

15.5 Orthography: Spelling Variants

15.6 Orthography: Interpretation

15.7 Corrections in D62

15.8 Variant Spellings in D62

APPENDIX

WHAT DID THE SCRIBES COUNT? - Francis I. Andersen & A. Dean Forbes

A.1 The Tradition

A.2 Specifics in the Tradition

A.3 Mechanisms of Divergence

A.4 Verse Counts

A.5 Middle Verses

A.6 Word Counts

A.7 The Middle Word of the Torah

A.8 Letter Counts

A.8.1 Letter Counts of the Torah

A.8.2 Letter Counts of the Bible

A.9 Middle Letters

A.9.1 The Middle Letter of the Torah

A.9.2 The Middle Letter of the Psalter

A.9.3 The Middle Letter of the Bible

A.10 Conclusions

REFERENCES

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