Thursday, November 18, 2004
Heb 3: on nouns
Some considerations on nouns:
Some exceptions:
Names with no special ending, but feminine gender:
אֶרֶץ land
עִיר city
אֶבֶן stone
Irregular stem change in the plural:
יוֹם (sg) -- יָמִים (pl) day
אִישׁ (sg) -- אֲנָשִׁים (pl) man
אִשָּׁה (sg) -- נָשִׁים (pl) woman
It is possible to give some general rules for plurals:
Propretonic reduction
With 2 syllable nouns, accented on the final syllable, and with qamets or tsere in the first or in the pretonic syllable: the qamets or tsere in an open propretonic syllable will reduce to shewa. Examples:
דָּבָר (sg) -- דְּבָרִים (pl) word
זָקֵן (sg) -- זְקֵנִים (pl) old man
מָקוֹם (sg) -- מְקוֹמוֹת (pl) place (1)
(1) this noun is masculine but takes a feminine ending in the plural
Segholate nouns (i.e. nouns with seghol)
With 2 syllable nouns, accented on the first syllable, and often two seghol vowels (but sometimes one, or even none): in the plural, they have a vocal shewa or a hateph under the first consonant, and a qamets under the second consonant.
Examples:
מֶלֶך (sg) -- מְלָכִים (pl) king
זֶבַח (sg) -- זְבָחִים (pl) sacrifice
סֶפֶר (sg) -- סְפָרִים (pl) book
נַעַר (sg) -- נְעָרִים (pl) young man (2)
עֶבֶד (sg) -- עֲבָדִים (pl) servant (3)
(2) note that there is no seghol here, but there is a first syllable accent
(3) remember that gutturals cannot take a vocal shewa, so there is a compound shewa here
Geminate nouns
Geminate nouns are biconsonantal nouns that originally were triconsonantal, with the last two consonants identical. In the plural, the consonant that orginally appeared twice takes on a dagesh forte.
Examples:
עַם (sg) -- עַמִּים (pl) people
חֵץ (sg) -- חִצִּים (pl) arrow (4)
חֹק (sg) -- חֻקִּים (pl) statute (4)
(4) note here also the change of vocalization; it is not easy to give rules for this.
The rule of shewa
We can't have a sequence of two syllables each with a shewa. If this is going to happen because of inflection or combination of words and elements, this is what happens:
cons. + shewa + cons. + shewa ---> cons. + i + cons.
For example:
לְ + נְבִי (to + my prophet)
becomes
לִנבִי
In other words, the first shewa becomes an hireq and the second one becomes silent.
The rule of shewa for gutturals
Remember that gutturals take a compound shewa. But a vocal shewa cannot precede a guttural with this compound shewa, so the vocal shewa is replaced with the corresponding vowel of the compound shewa.
For example:
בְ + חֲלוֹם
becomes
בַחֲלוֹם
That is, the shewa of בְ changes to the vowel of the compound shewa of חֲ and becomes בַ
- Masculine singular has no special ending
- Masculine plural usually ends with ים. (iym)
- Masculine dual ends with יִם ַ (ayim)
- Feminine singular usually ends with ה ָ (āh), but also with ת ַ (at) and ת ֶ (et)
- Feminine plural usually ends with וֹת (ot)
- Feminine dual ends with יִם ַ (ayim) - same as masculine dual
Singular | Plural | Dual | |
---|---|---|---|
Masculine | סוּס | סוּסִים | סוּסַיִם |
Feminine | תּוֹרָה | תּוֹרוֹת | תּוֹרַיִם |
Some exceptions:
Names with no special ending, but feminine gender:
אֶרֶץ land
עִיר city
אֶבֶן stone
Irregular stem change in the plural:
יוֹם (sg) -- יָמִים (pl) day
אִישׁ (sg) -- אֲנָשִׁים (pl) man
אִשָּׁה (sg) -- נָשִׁים (pl) woman
It is possible to give some general rules for plurals:
Propretonic reduction
With 2 syllable nouns, accented on the final syllable, and with qamets or tsere in the first or in the pretonic syllable: the qamets or tsere in an open propretonic syllable will reduce to shewa. Examples:
דָּבָר (sg) -- דְּבָרִים (pl) word
זָקֵן (sg) -- זְקֵנִים (pl) old man
מָקוֹם (sg) -- מְקוֹמוֹת (pl) place (1)
(1) this noun is masculine but takes a feminine ending in the plural
Segholate nouns (i.e. nouns with seghol)
With 2 syllable nouns, accented on the first syllable, and often two seghol vowels (but sometimes one, or even none): in the plural, they have a vocal shewa or a hateph under the first consonant, and a qamets under the second consonant.
Examples:
מֶלֶך (sg) -- מְלָכִים (pl) king
זֶבַח (sg) -- זְבָחִים (pl) sacrifice
סֶפֶר (sg) -- סְפָרִים (pl) book
נַעַר (sg) -- נְעָרִים (pl) young man (2)
עֶבֶד (sg) -- עֲבָדִים (pl) servant (3)
(2) note that there is no seghol here, but there is a first syllable accent
(3) remember that gutturals cannot take a vocal shewa, so there is a compound shewa here
Geminate nouns
Geminate nouns are biconsonantal nouns that originally were triconsonantal, with the last two consonants identical. In the plural, the consonant that orginally appeared twice takes on a dagesh forte.
Examples:
עַם (sg) -- עַמִּים (pl) people
חֵץ (sg) -- חִצִּים (pl) arrow (4)
חֹק (sg) -- חֻקִּים (pl) statute (4)
(4) note here also the change of vocalization; it is not easy to give rules for this.
The rule of shewa
We can't have a sequence of two syllables each with a shewa. If this is going to happen because of inflection or combination of words and elements, this is what happens:
cons. + shewa + cons. + shewa ---> cons. + i + cons.
For example:
לְ + נְבִי (to + my prophet)
becomes
לִנבִי
In other words, the first shewa becomes an hireq and the second one becomes silent.
The rule of shewa for gutturals
Remember that gutturals take a compound shewa. But a vocal shewa cannot precede a guttural with this compound shewa, so the vocal shewa is replaced with the corresponding vowel of the compound shewa.
For example:
בְ + חֲלוֹם
becomes
בַחֲלוֹם
That is, the shewa of בְ changes to the vowel of the compound shewa of חֲ and becomes בַ