Principles of Hebrew Grammar

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Trubner, 1876 - 219 páginas
 

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Página iii - PRINCIPLES OF HEBREW GRAMMAR. By JPN Land, Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Leyden. Translated from the Dutch, by Reginald Lane Poole, Balliol College, Oxford. Part I. Sounds. Part II. Words. With Large Additions by the Author, and a new Preface. Crown 8vo, pp. xx. and 220, cloth. 1876. 7s. 6d. LANE.— THE KORAN. See Triibner's Oriental Series. LANGE. — A HISTORY OF MATERIALISM. See English and Foreign Philosophical Library, Vols.
Página 40 - When a suffix beginning with a vowel is added to a word ending in silent e, the e is omitted.
Página iii - LAND.— THE PRINCIPLES OF HEBREW GRAMMAR. By JPN Land, Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Leyden. Translated from the Dutch, by Reginald Lane Poole, Balliol College, Oxford. Part I. Sounds. Part II. Words. With Large Additions by the Author, and a new Preface. Crown 8vo, pp. xx. and 220, cloth. 1876. 7s. 6d. LANE.— THE KORAN. See Triibner's Oriental Series.
Página 89 - The form is not derived from the corresponding absolute state, but the termination is attached to the uninflected stem, just as in the feminine and in the dual (119) : thus "QJJ 'ABD ' servant,' 3D1 RAKB 'chariot,' TU NIDR 'vow,' Vp GURN 'threshing•ftoor /—plural absolute DHaj, CP3Dn, construct "^^S?
Página 7 - In philology we do not take into consideration the air-waves of which the sounds when analysed consist ; but, on the one hand, the impression they make on the ear ; and, on the other hand, the movements of the organs of speech, as they are felt by the speaker.
Página xvi - One of the leading features of the present work will be seen to lie in the treatment of the Doctrine of Vowels.
Página 15 - ... as distinctly formed by the contact of the tip of the tongue with the upper incisors. From the position and formation of these consonants and the necessity for distinguishing between them, it usually ensues that their differentiation makes the first step in that instinctive study of lip reading, which to the appreciably deaf person becomes eventually more or less habitual...
Página 38 - At the beginning of a word, or in the middle if preceded by i, 1 commonly changes into ">; as for T?1 , o.
Página 149 - It is most probable that this -AN is in its origin demonstrative and akin to the ancient case-endings, and to the connecting-vowels of the genitive-suffixes : cp.

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