Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic

For nearly a thousand years, the texts of the Hebrew Bible were transmitted both in writing, as consonantal texts lacking much of the information on their pronunciation, and orally, as an accompanying reading tradition which supplied this information. During this period of oral transmission, sound c...

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Main Author: Benjamin Suchard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Finnish Oriental Society 2019-03-01
Series:Studia Orientalia Electronica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/store/article/view/74104
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author Benjamin Suchard
author_facet Benjamin Suchard
author_sort Benjamin Suchard
collection DOAJ
description For nearly a thousand years, the texts of the Hebrew Bible were transmitted both in writing, as consonantal texts lacking much of the information on their pronunciation, and orally, as an accompanying reading tradition which supplied this information. During this period of oral transmission, sound changes affected the reading tradition. This paper identifies a number of sound changes that took place in the reading tradition by comparing their effects on Biblical Hebrew to those on Biblical Aramaic, the related but distinct language of a small part of the biblical corpus: sound changes that affect both languages equally probably took place in the reading tradition, while those that are limited to one language probably preceded this shared oral transmission. Drawing this distinction allows us to reconstruct the pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic as it was fixed in the reading tradition, highlighting several morphological discrepancies between the dialect underlying it and that of the consonantal texts.
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spelling doaj.art-7ea4aed2ef1341b7bbb19b072da7c39b2022-12-21T19:18:28ZengFinnish Oriental SocietyStudia Orientalia Electronica2323-52092019-03-0175265https://doi.org/10.23993/store.74104Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical AramaicBenjamin Suchard0Leiden UniversityFor nearly a thousand years, the texts of the Hebrew Bible were transmitted both in writing, as consonantal texts lacking much of the information on their pronunciation, and orally, as an accompanying reading tradition which supplied this information. During this period of oral transmission, sound changes affected the reading tradition. This paper identifies a number of sound changes that took place in the reading tradition by comparing their effects on Biblical Hebrew to those on Biblical Aramaic, the related but distinct language of a small part of the biblical corpus: sound changes that affect both languages equally probably took place in the reading tradition, while those that are limited to one language probably preceded this shared oral transmission. Drawing this distinction allows us to reconstruct the pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic as it was fixed in the reading tradition, highlighting several morphological discrepancies between the dialect underlying it and that of the consonantal texts.https://journal.fi/store/article/view/74104aramaichebrewhebrew biblehistorical linguistics
spellingShingle Benjamin Suchard
Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic
Studia Orientalia Electronica
aramaic
hebrew
hebrew bible
historical linguistics
title Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic
title_full Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic
title_fullStr Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic
title_full_unstemmed Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic
title_short Sound Changes in the (Pre-)Masoretic Reading Tradition and the Original Pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic
title_sort sound changes in the pre masoretic reading tradition and the original pronunciation of biblical aramaic
topic aramaic
hebrew
hebrew bible
historical linguistics
url https://journal.fi/store/article/view/74104
work_keys_str_mv AT benjaminsuchard soundchangesinthepremasoreticreadingtraditionandtheoriginalpronunciationofbiblicalaramaic