Lewis:

On Sat, Apr 27, 2013 at 8:25 PM, Lewis Reich <[email protected]> wrote:

> Modern Hebrew is, I think, closer to Biblical Hebrew than modern English
> is to Shakespearean English; my elementary school study of the Torah was a
> perfectly effective foundation for modern conversational Hebrew.
>

Was what you learned really Biblical Hebrew, or medieval Hebrew? Especially
elementary school study? Was your elementary school learning based on
modern Hebrew, or at least medieval Hebrew, using modern grammar, modern
vocabulary, etc.?

>From what I can tell, Masoretic Hebrew was early medieval Hebrew, which is
one reason why their dots are sometimes off. Further, it’s pretty much a
given that Masoretic pronunciation differed from Biblical pronunciation.
You mention Torah, and Torah is on the whole simpler Hebrew (because of the
nature of its content) than some of the prophets and writings.

But my experience with modern Hebrew is mostly connected with written
Hebrew, not spoken, and modern written Hebrew is so different that I can’t
understand it.


> Lewis Reich
> [email protected]
>
> Please excuse brevity and misspellings in messages sent from my phone.
>

Karl W. Randolph.


> On Apr 27, 2013 1:00 PM, "K Randolph" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Modern Hebrew is a very different creature from Biblical Hebrew—different
>> grammar, different vocabulary, different spelling, different expressions,
>> etc. I don’t know modern Israeli Hebrew, nor other cognate languages, hence
>> my understanding of Biblical Hebrew is uncontaminated from such sources.
>>
>>>
>>> Karl W. Randolph.
>>
>
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