Li-kero. It's an infinitive, so the lamed is set off as a particle, and the sheva under the kuf is sheva na.
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 12:58 PM, Marlene Schiffman <schif...@yu.edu> wrote: > In addition OCLC DLC has 40 records that say li-kero. > > > > Marlene Schiffman > > Gottesman Library Technical Services > > Yeshiva University > > 500 West 185th Street > > New York, NY 10033 > > > > 646 592-4276 (direct) > > 646 592-4100 (general office) > > > > *From:* Marlene Schiffman > *Sent:* Tuesday, September 20, 2016 3:40 PM > *To:* hasaf...@lists.osu.edu > *Subject:* romanization question > > > > לקרא > > > > Li-kro, li-kero, likro? > > > > Even Shoshan and siddurim (Hertz and Birnbaum) have sheva. Alkalay does > not use sheva. > > > > Any ruling on this one? Thanks, > > > > Marlene Schiffman > > Gottesman Library Technical Services > > Yeshiva University > > 500 West 185th Street > > New York, NY 10033 > > > > 646 592-4276 (direct) > > 646 592-4100 (general office) > > > > _______________________________________________ > Heb-naco mailing list > Heb-naco@lists.osu.edu > https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/heb-naco > > -- Bob Talbott Principal cataloger/Hebraica cataloger UC Berkeley 250 Moffitt Berkeley, CA 94720 I'm just mad about Saffron
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