1. It is my opinion that there is no such thing as "movement" in Hebrew. No root and no verb describes anything dynamical, except as construed by the imagination.
2. The uni-literal root Q is the essential part of קאה Q)H, a variant of G and גאה G)H, 'extended, tall'. QOA קוע from Q, is 'nobleman', as is $OA שוע from $ (see Ezekiel 23:23). 3. Now that Hebrew is sharply delineated and neatly categorized PAGA$ is reserved for 'meet, have a דייט date'. A reminder as to the possibly violent nature of PG$ is left us by the PAGO$, 'bumper, fender', and the variant PAGAZ, 'artillery shell'. For a more violent encounter we use now נגש NG$, which is to נגע NG) as PG$ is to פגע PG), and the derived HIT-NAG$-UT, crash, clash'. 4. it appears to me that תקע/שקע TQ(/$Q( is +/-. 5. It appears to me that קעקע Q(Q( is קאה-קאה 'heap upon a heap', as are the scars on a tattooed skin. Isaac Fried, Boston University On Sep 11, 2012, at 11:09 AM, Nir cohen - Prof. Mat. wrote: > the biradical Q( has to do with a > vigorous or extended movement, later specializing to RQ(, > TQ(, $Q(, BQ(, NQ( and Q(Q( (damage/destroy a wall), and maybe ... > yes, PG(. _______________________________________________ b-hebrew mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/b-hebrew
