1 / 24

Berachah Bible Institute Hebrew Grammar I

Berachah Bible Institute Hebrew Grammar I. Chapter 8: Hebrew Pronouns. Hebrew Pronouns. BBI Hebrew Grammar I. Section 8.1 – Introduction. Some terminology. Antecedent – The word the pronoun refers back to. Personal Pronoun – He hit the ball. Demonstrative Pronoun – That is the ball.

kalyca
Download Presentation

Berachah Bible Institute Hebrew Grammar I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Berachah Bible InstituteHebrew Grammar I Chapter 8: Hebrew Pronouns

  2. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.1 – Introduction Some terminology • Antecedent – The word the pronoun refers back to • Personal Pronoun – He hit the ball • Demonstrative Pronoun – That isthe ball In our class, we’ll refer to demonstrative pronouns as adjectives. We’ll see why in just a moment. • Relative Pronoun – He hit the ball that I threw • Interrogative Pronoun – What is his name?

  3. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.2 – Independent Personal Pronouns • Independent – Stands on its own; not attached • Personal – Stands for a person, whether 1st, 2nd, or 3rd • I, we • You • he/she/it/they • Like English, no gender for 1st person • Unlike English, gender for all 2nd and 3rd person pronouns • Unlike English, no neuter third person “it”

  4. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.3 – IPP Paradigm Not easy, but must memorize this chart:

  5. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.4 – Use of IPP Often in “noun clauses”” • Supply a “to be” verb • See examples on page 71 Sometimes in “verbal clauses” • In English, you usually cannot use a verb without an explicit subject. • In Spanish, you can. “I” “You” • In Hebrew, you can as well. ? “ate ice cream” “We” • So, IPP are sometimes [cf. §8.13] used with verbs for special emphasis (see next example) Comiste helado = Tu comiste helado “Ya’ll” • T.l.k'_a' !m,v,Þw" vb;²d>W tl,soô “He” “She”

  6. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.4 – Use of IPP (continued) and we will listen, with us you Speak! h['m'_v.nIw> WnM'Þ[i hT'îa;-rBeD: God with us speak but [let] not ~yhiÞl{a/ WnM'²[i rBEïd:y>-la;w> Exod 20:19

  7. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.5 – Demonstrative Pronouns “They may be used either as adjectives or as pronouns” (pg. 71) – somewhat confusing? • Strange to say that a pronoun may be used as a pronoun but may not. • Adjectives may be used in several different ways: • Attributive – The red ball • Substantive – Red is a color • Predicate – The ball is red What they mean is it may be used as an attributive adjective, the other two uses of adjectives being more “noun-like” • Easier to say that demonstrative pronouns are used much like adjectives.

  8. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.5 – Demonstrative Pronouns • Attributive – The red ball taZO=h; #r<a'äh'-ta, !TEßa, ^ê[]r>z:“l. • Substantive – Red is a color ‘tyrIB.h;-tAa) tazOÝ • Predicate – The ball is red tyfi_[' taZOæ-hm; Not an important useUsually only with interrogatives

  9. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.6 – Demonstrative Paradigm Easy because similar to IPP Paradigm

  10. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.6 – Demonstrative Paradigm Easy because similar to IPP Paradigm

  11. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.6 – Demonstrative Paradigm Easy because similar to IPP Paradigm

  12. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.7 – Use of Demonstratives Examples to Come! Nothing new to learn! • As we said, much like adjectives • When an adjective or demonstrative pronoun functions attributively, it follows the modified noun and agrees with it in gender, number, and definiteness. • When a demonstrative pronoun functions substantively it precedes the noun and agrees with it in gender and number but not definiteness. This is similar to how predicate adjectives are used. • A few differences! • Note predicate adjective use corresponds to substantive pronoun use • Unlike predicate adjectives, substantive pronouns never follow noun

  13. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.8 – Relative Pronoun A relative clause is a dependent clause that begins with a relative pronoun and modifies a noun. In English, there are three relative pronouns:1) Who2) That3) Which In Hebrew, there is only one: rv,a]

  14. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.9 – Interrogative Pronouns ymi – Pronounced “Me,” means “Who” hm' – Pronounced “Mah,” means “What” (Also written as hm; and hm,)

  15. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.10 – Interrogative Particle Learn the form and note the clues on page 76 An example: she my sister to me say he Did not awhiê ytixoåa] ‘yli-rm;a'( aWhÜ al{’h] Did he not say to me, “She is my sister?”

  16. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Section 8.11 - Summary • Know the four types of Hebrew pronouns: Independent Personal, Demonstrative, Relative, Interrogative • Know the two charts on page 77. • Know the Hebrew relative and interrogative pronouns • Be able to translate simple phrases as on pgs. 73-74

  17. BBIHebrew Grammar I Reminder • After chapter 7, you know 53% of all OT words • After chapter 8, you will know 58% of all OT words (thanks, in part, to rv,a]) • Don’t forget to be doing journal (turn in @ end) • Vocabulary and Grammar Quiz this week. • Turn in Midterm

  18. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #1 David [the] father [of] Jesse [the] father [of] He [is] dwI)d" ybiîa] yv;ÞyI-ybia] aWhï 3 ms IPP in noun clause (i.e., no verb) Ruth 4:17

  19. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #2 into the fire their gods [DDOM] And they gave (= cast) vae_B' ~h,Þyhel{a/-ta, Wnðt.n"w> they gods not for hM'heª ~yhiøl{a/ al{’ •yKi 3 mp IPP in noun clause (i.e., no verb) 2 Kings 19:18

  20. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #3 Adam of the generations of [the] book This ~d"_a' tdoßl.AT rp,seê hz<å Substantive use of ms demonstrative pronoun (precedes noun) Genesis 5:1

  21. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #4 our fathers they listened not Wnyteªboa] W[øm.v'-al{) the this the book the words of on (=to) hZ<ëh; rp,Seäh; ‘yrEb.DI-l[; Attributive use of ms demonstrative pronoun (follows noun, matches in definiteness) 2 Kings 22:13

  22. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #5 You know noun form, this is the related verb the this (fs) the good (fs) [DDOM] your servant to And you spoke taZO*h; hb'ÞAJh;-ta, ^êD>b.[;-la,( ‘rBed:T.w: Attributive use of fs demonstrative pronoun (follows noun, agrees in definiteness) 2 Samuel 7:28

  23. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #6 You know noun form, this is the related verb [DDOM]3msx I must do Yahweh speaks that All hf,([/a,¥ Atïao hw"ßhy> rBEïd:y>-rv,a] lKo± Relative Pronoun (can you identify the relative clause and the noun it modifies?) Numbers 23:26

  24. Hebrew Pronouns BBIHebrew Grammar I Example #7 before you the land all not ? ^yn<ëp'l. ‘#r<a'’h'-lk' al{Üh] Interrogative Pronoun Genesis 13:9

More Related