I am looking for instances in which הִנֵּה is not clause-initial. Is it possible to undertake such a search with, say, the WIVU or A-F database?
— Edited
Click on "Share" in the search window on the right and then "Make document public". You will then receive a link. You can then download the file in Logos Documents. For your search I get 24 hits. But הִנֵּה is always at the beginning of the sentence there. Unfortunately, I cannot fully follow your search. The search normally begins with a "Sentence or Clause" and then you make further restrictions. This word is usually at the beginning of sentences and in direct speech. It also introduces subordinate clauses. Do you have a reference point for the search? Here's another search to test: (https://flshare.net/w53zq8)- Thanks for showing how one creates a link. So this is (nearly) the search: https://flshare.net/r95yf8
- Your test (https://flshare.net/w53zq8) produces many clause-initial results. Cook and Holmstedt point out that הִנֵּה occasionally occurs in the middle of a clause that already has a verb which suggests that הִנֵּה is an interjection. This is the context for me looking for examples in which הִנֵּה is used inside a clause. I should construct a search for הִנֵּה inside clauses with verbs (excluding participles).