Barry:

On Sat, Apr 27, 2013 at 8:15 PM, Barry <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 4/27/2013 8:23 PM, K Randolph wrote:
>
> > In closing, what do you want to do with your study of Biblical Hebrew?
> > If you want to make it part of a broader study of linguistics, then a
> > study of cognate languages is not only preferable, but needed. But if
> > you merely want to maximize your understanding of Hebrew itself and of
> > the Tanakh, then a study of cognate languages will actually hurt.
>
> That's not my experience at all. I've been doing Latin and Greek
> (cognate languages) simultaneously since 1977. It hasn't hurt me at all,
> and in fact, has been quite helpful. Learning Aramaic was far easier
> since I already had some Hebrew under my belt. In the early stages of
> learning, if you do two languages at the same time, it can occasionally
> be confusing, but rarely (again in my experience) due to the cognate
> nature of the languages.
>

Maybe a better way to say it is the difference between learning to use a
language, and acquiring mastery thereof. The patterns learned in a cognate
language can interfere with acquiring mastery in a target language, as the
mind unconsciously tries to apply consistently the patterns to similar
situations. The cognate effect interferes with the mastery, not basic
learning.

What I’ve learned is that Biblical Hebrew grammar is far different from
even Mishnaic Hebrew. From what I learned, Mishnaic Hebrew is a tense based
language (according to Waltke and O’Connor). Biblical Hebrew conjugates for
neither tense, nor aspect, nor mood, rather grammaticalizes for concepts
that I’ve found in no other language. But in reaching this realization, I
even had to unlearn what I was taught in class concerning Hebrew. That took
me many years and several times reading Tanakh through cover to cover.

Now I studied Latin, but found it such a useless language that I forgot
almost all that I learned. Not so with koiné Greek, which I use almost
every day.

>
> --
> N.E. Barry Hofstetter
> Semper melius Latine sonat
> The American Academy
> http://www.theamericanacademy.net
> The North American Reformed Seminary
> http://www.tnars.net
> Bible Translation Magazine
> http://www.bible-translation.net
>
> http://my.opera.com/barryhofstetter/blog
>

Karl W. Randolph.
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