Logos link
For example, I just picked up Benjamin J. Noonan's Advances in the Study of Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic: New Insights for Reading the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Academic, 2020) for $8.99 and just started reading it.
From the first chapter:
It's certainly true that John Cook and Robert Holmstedt are doing all they can to bring linguistics to the fore in our approach to biblical Hebrew.Traditionally we have done a good job learning Biblical Hebrew and Biblical Aramaic, but a not so good job of understanding these languages in light of linguistics. This is a problem because—as this book will demonstrate—linguistics directly impacts exegesis. Whether we realize it or not, we each have our own understanding of linguistics that we bring to the table when we read Hebrew and Aramaic. An informed understanding will produce good results, but a poor understanding will produce bad results. To ignore linguistics is to bring harm to our understanding of the Hebrew Bible, which then weakens our effectiveness in ministry and the academy.
Would you agree that learning at least the basics about linguistics is important to a good understanding of the languages?