Chris: On Tue, Jul 2, 2013 at 5:39 AM, Chris Watts <[email protected]>wrote:
> So may I ask then for your thougts and other peoples' thoughts on this > article > http://www.sbl-site.org/**publications/article.aspx?**articleId=675<http://www.sbl-site.org/publications/article.aspx?articleId=675> > > Chris Watts > Ireland > This article was referenced before on this list, and at that time I endorsed its conclusions—all of them, because I had come to many of the same conclusions before reading the article. As a learner, I fall into his third category—one who merely wants to read the text of Tanakh. In fact, I never intended to learn Hebrew, but found myself in a college level Hebrew class as a result of a class mix-up, and stayed (Curiosity killed the cat). I never intended on writing a dictionary, but as I read Tanakh through time after time, I noticed more and more cases where the dictionaries I had available to me at that time (Gesenius, Davidson, occasional references to BDB, Lisowski, this last one being a concordance) didn’t always match what I found in the text and/or lexicographic methods I found useful for understanding modern languages. I never intended to write a grammar, but again much of the grammar I was taught, mostly as it pertains to verbs, doesn’t fit the text I read, so now I have a rudimentary grammar that covers the most important aspects of the language. And to think that all started because I found myself in a beginning Hebrew class instead of the class I wanted to attend. If I were to get an opportunity to teach Hebrew, I think I’d follow much the same as he outlined in his article—teach the points and the modern pronunciation (I might even include the Yemenite pronunciation that I was taught)—but emphasize reading the text, and that unpointed. For extra credit, I may include teaching the archaic Hebrew script that I have used for years to read Tanakh. Karl W. Randolph.
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