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Products>Charts of Biblical Hebrew (ZondervanCharts)

Charts of Biblical Hebrew (ZondervanCharts)

Digital Logos Edition

Logos Editions are fully connected to your library and Bible study tools.

$29.99

Overview

Charts of Biblical Hebrew provides students of biblical Hebrew with a unique, highly visual study aid for learning the language.

This innovative language resource contains 130 of the most vital Hebrew-learning charts in order to accomplish two things:

1. To simplify grammatical presentation as much as possible.

2. To present the basics of biblical Hebrew as thoroughly as possible.

Featuring two color design, Charts of Biblical Hebrew is cross-referenced to Pratico and Van Pelt’s Basics of Biblical Hebrew and may be used with other first-year biblical Hebrew textbooks as well. The charts are also an ideal means of review for advanced students.

ZondervanCharts are ready references for those who need the essential information at their fingertips. Accessible and highly useful, the books in this library offer clear organization and thorough summaries of issues, subjects, and topics that are key for Christian students and learners. The visuals and captions will cater to any teaching methodology, style, or program.

  • Simplifies grammatical presentation for students learning biblical Hebrew
  • Presents the basics of biblical Hebrew in a thorough and comprehensive manner
  • Serves as a ready reference and ideal review tool for students of all levels
  • Section 1: The Basics of Hebrew Writing
  • Section 2: The Basics of Hebrew Nouns and Nominals
  • Section 3: Introduction to Hebrew Verbs and the Qal Stem
  • Section 4: Introduction to the Derived Stems
  • Section 5: Selected Particles
  • Section 6: Summary Verb Charts

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  1. Bede

    Bede

    12/16/2025

    Looking at the 'See Inside' preview, on p. 437 it has the directional ending, but noe of the examples given has the heth ending. On the same page, it says the negative particle 'lo' is always place before the verb, but the examples given show it at the end of the clause. This makes me question the accuracy and usefulness of the book.
  2. Mateus de Castro
    Will the 'color' part of their resource be honored this time by Logos? Or will it be like Logos' version of their colored grammar: no color where it matters?

$29.99