Variation on phrase from Ecclesiastes

A place for those new to Biblical Hebrew to ask basic questions about the language of the Hebrew Bible.
Forum rules
Members will observe the rules for respectful discourse at all times!
Please sign all posts with your first and last (family) name.
kwrandolph
Posts: 1531
Joined: Sun Sep 29, 2013 12:51 am

Re: Variation on phrase from Ecclesiastes

Post by kwrandolph »

Ken M. Penner wrote:
kwrandolph wrote:How do you know this is not a participle when read in context:
והסכל ירבה דברים לא ידע האדם מה שיהיה?
In Ecclesiastes, the participle is usually spelled יודע.
Usually, but not always. E.g. Ecclesiastes 9:11.
Ken M. Penner wrote:
kwrandolph wrote: On what basis do you claim that this is a prefix conjugation (the Masoretic points don’t count as evidence)?
I make that claim on the basis of the Masoretic points. Feel free to ignore them; I don't.
I’ve found the Masoretic points demonstrably wrong often enough that I now insist that they not be counted as a reliable reference. By “demonstrably wrong”, I mean according to the meaning given by the points, not whether or not they correctly reference Biblical pronunciation (which they also don’t).
Ken M. Penner wrote:
kwrandolph wrote: But I agree with you that the Yiqtol doesn’t express “aspect” (a time measurement) nor tense. As a result, this is why I wonder how well a modern Israeli who knows only modern Hebrew would understand good Biblical Hebrew, because modern Hebrew is a tense based language?
אני לא יודע
Good Biblical Hebrew is אני לא ידעתי according to the majority of recorded conversations in Tanakh.
Ken M. Penner wrote:
kwrandolph wrote:
Ken M. Penner wrote:Mind you, this is late biblical Hebrew. It could be different in earlier stages of Hebrew.
You mean that about 950 BC is “late Biblical Hebrew”?
No, I don't mean that. To use just the example in this message, check out the fuller spelling of the participle יודע and compare it books we know are early and to books we know are late. יודע never appears in the Pentateuch, Joshua, Judges, but it does in Esther, Ezekiel, & 2 Chronicles.
You shouldn’t make a claim that’s so easy to check. What about Ruth 3:11? Samuel gives indications of early authorship, and the form is found three times in those books. Also found in Isaiah, Amos and other kingdom period books. (Actually the consonantal form appears more often, but as a Niphal, not a participle.) Ecclesiastes is an early kingdom era book, written over four centuries after the Pentateuch. Since the fuller spelling of the participle is found in other kingdom era books, why not also here?

Karl W. Randolph.
beauford
Posts: 7
Joined: Wed Jul 02, 2014 10:00 pm

Re: Variation on phrase from Ecclesiastes

Post by beauford »

Thank you both for your full treatment of this issue! This discussion has been very informative.
Robert Hanshaw
User avatar
Ben Putnam
Posts: 47
Joined: Sun Oct 06, 2013 11:08 am

Re: Variation on phrase from Ecclesiastes

Post by Ben Putnam »

For modern, I would venture to say it would be אף אחד לא יודע שום דבר af eHad lo yodea` shum davar. I'm thinking מאומה me'uma there may be more formal than שום דבר in modern. But אף אחד is the modern idiom for nobody, no one.

For biblical Hebrew, I would say one way to word it might be לא ידע איש מאומה lo yada` ish me'uma. For a statement that focuses more on the present situation of no one currently knowing anything, I'd probably go for אין איש יודע מאומה en ish yodea` me'uma.

ברכות
braxot
Ben Putnam
Post Reply