B"H -

I have been studying Davidson's Lexicon of Hebrew, in particular the
"declension" of nouns they have arranged.

I am stuck on a concept I can't figure out: in the 2nd declension, which
refers mainly to reduction of kamets, they point out that when the grave
suffix -chem is added to two words, namely

YAD and DAM, the resulting forms are YED-CHEM and DIM-CHEM.

They say that a patach does not result, because the forms segol-shva and
hiriq-shva are shorter than the expected patach-shva.


I am confused as to what this exactly means - what makes one construction
shorter than another, when all are short vowels?

How also, can vowels shorten out of their vowel types, e.g. a kamets moving
to the e type segol, and also the i type hiriq?

I was under the impression vowels do not switch into other vowel types -
the reduction is strictly within their own boundaries.

I am very curious about this question, and subscribed to this list on its
merit. I thank anyone who can help.

Best,

Aviel Jones
_______________________________________________
b-hebrew mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/b-hebrew

Reply via email to