Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax

This study considers two oddities of the syntax of Ancient Hebrew cardinal numerals: first, numerals participate to greater or lesser extent—depending on the numeral—in both adjectival and nominal syntax; second, some nouns appear in the singular when quantified by numerals with the value eleven or...

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Main Author: Screnock, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: National Association of Professors of Hebrew 2020
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author Screnock, J
author_facet Screnock, J
author_sort Screnock, J
collection OXFORD
description This study considers two oddities of the syntax of Ancient Hebrew cardinal numerals: first, numerals participate to greater or lesser extent—depending on the numeral—in both adjectival and nominal syntax; second, some nouns appear in the singular when quantified by numerals with the value eleven or higher, though there are exceptions with the very same nouns. Are numerals adjectives or nouns, and why does each numeral behave in different ways? Numerals in Hebrew—as in most or all languages—are properties of sets, and as such they behave both like adjectives and like nouns. Their underlying semantics result in a diversity of morpho-syntactic and syntactic features. Why do some nouns usually appear in the singular with numerals eleven and higher, and why are there exceptions? The use of the singular with numerals eleven and higher is a feature from older Hebrew. In our extant evidence, it is found only with high-use phrases, where the older feature is preserved. Exceptions arise because old features sometimes occur even after they are replaced, because high use phrases—not high use nouns—preserve the earlier feature, and because the structure of complex adding numerals sometimes precludes analysis of the noun as quantified by the entire adding numeral.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b7961ef1-8d20-4ae6-b9c7-af4bb49aa4b22022-03-27T04:49:55ZSome oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntaxJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b7961ef1-8d20-4ae6-b9c7-af4bb49aa4b2EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordNational Association of Professors of Hebrew2020Screnock, JThis study considers two oddities of the syntax of Ancient Hebrew cardinal numerals: first, numerals participate to greater or lesser extent—depending on the numeral—in both adjectival and nominal syntax; second, some nouns appear in the singular when quantified by numerals with the value eleven or higher, though there are exceptions with the very same nouns. Are numerals adjectives or nouns, and why does each numeral behave in different ways? Numerals in Hebrew—as in most or all languages—are properties of sets, and as such they behave both like adjectives and like nouns. Their underlying semantics result in a diversity of morpho-syntactic and syntactic features. Why do some nouns usually appear in the singular with numerals eleven and higher, and why are there exceptions? The use of the singular with numerals eleven and higher is a feature from older Hebrew. In our extant evidence, it is found only with high-use phrases, where the older feature is preserved. Exceptions arise because old features sometimes occur even after they are replaced, because high use phrases—not high use nouns—preserve the earlier feature, and because the structure of complex adding numerals sometimes precludes analysis of the noun as quantified by the entire adding numeral.
spellingShingle Screnock, J
Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax
title Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax
title_full Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax
title_fullStr Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax
title_full_unstemmed Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax
title_short Some oddities of Ancient Hebrew numeral syntax
title_sort some oddities of ancient hebrew numeral syntax
work_keys_str_mv AT screnockj someodditiesofancienthebrewnumeralsyntax