Digital Logos Edition
English Grammar to Ace Biblical Hebrew enables students of biblical Hebrew to grasp the basic concepts of English grammar that are needed in order to be able to transfer these concepts to biblical Hebrew.
One of the biggest problems students encounter learning biblical languages, especially Hebrew, is that they have either forgotten or simply do not know their English grammar. Concepts such as verb tense and voice, relative pronouns, antecedents, adjectival substantives, and the like, sound like familiar terms, but may seem foreign when it’s time to put them to practice.
With chapters such as, “To Be or Not to Be, That Is the Infinitive” and “Pronouns: Grammatical Stunt Doubles,” this book is both clever and engaging. All Hebrew students will become better translators—and ultimately better pastors and leaders—with the help of this book. Tips for studying Hebrew, a glossary, and a list of additional Hebrew resources is also provided.
“Now remember, the information presented just above is not new information. Everything we have discussed you already know at the intuitive level as a native English speaker (if you are a native English speaker). I have simply taken what you already know and identified appropriate categories and labels. These categories and labels will help to connect your English to God’s Hebrew.” (Page 22)
“In Hebrew, standard word order is traditionally identified as verb-subject-object-modifier (abbreviated VSOM)” (Page 59)
“When a prepositional phrase modifies a noun, it is adjectival.” (Page 38)
“In English, the article appears as its own word, ‘the.’ In Hebrew, however, the definite article never appears independently as its own word. Rather, it is prefixed to the word that it particularizes.” (Page 34)
“Other languages, like Hebrew, Spanish, and English, use word order to indicate word function within a sentence.” (Page 58)
Miles Van Pelt (PhD, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) is the Alan Belcher Professor of Old Testament and Biblical Languages at Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi, where he also serves as the director of the Summer Institute for Biblical Languages and academic dean.
2 ratings
Kara Hammer
7/29/2018
DavePL HI Haoli KI
1/13/2017