home page
About Us | e-Gorgias Newsletter | At ConferencesBecome an Affiliate | Authors | Digitization Services | Publishing Services | Book Grants | Career Opportunities | Staff  



MyGorgias Account | My Wish List | Recommendations for me | My Cart  
   Home | Best Sellers | Just Published | Journals | Series | Gorgias Dissertations | Advanced Search | Contact Us | Join Mailing List    Login

To be eligible for Gorgias BiblioPerks™ and to receive a 5% discount on all online orders login or create an account (no strings attached)!
Religion - Tatu, Silviu. The Qatal//Yiqtol (Yiqtol//Qatal) Verbal Sequence in Semitic Couplets  

Search:

 American Christianity
 Ancient Heritage of Iraq
 Ancient Near East
 Arabic & Islamic Studies
 Armenian Studies
 Biblical Studies
 Bookends & Paraphernalia
 Byzantium
 Children's Books
 Church History
 Classics
 Coptic & Egyptian Studies
 Dead Sea Scrolls
 Devotional
 Eastern Christianity
 Egyptology
 Euphrates Imprint
 European Studies
 Genocide Studies
 Gift Certificates
 Gift Suggestions
 Hebrew & Judaica
 Historical Fiction
 Journals
 Linguistics
 Literature
 Liturgy
 Mandaic
 Manuscripts
 Middle East
 Music
 Neo-Aramaic
 Patristics
 Philosophy & Theology
 Reference
 Religion
 Series
 Subscriptions
 Syriac
 Tigris Imprint
 Travel & Missionary
 Ugaritic
 Women's Studies

Download Catalog (PDF)
Contact Us
Site Map
Return Policy
Shipping Info
Gorgias Projects


      

Buy this book together with Lesser Deities in the Ugaritic Texts and the Hebrew Bible by Sang Youl Cho
The book investigates the qatal//yiqtol (yiqtol//qatal) verbal sequence, previously known as ‘tense shifting’, as found in couplets of the Hebrew Psalter, attempting an innovatory explanation by means of M.A.K. Halliday’s Systemic Theory. Examples from Ugaritic poetry are also provided.+This book explores ancient conceptions of the lesser deities, the so-called angels, in the Ugaritic texts and the Hebrew Bible. It provides readers with fundamental understanding of ancient Save $39.30
Total List Price: $262.00
Buy both books for only $222.70

Quantity:  
 

Customers who bought this book also bought:

Lesser Deities in the Ugaritic Texts and the Hebrew Bible by Sang Youl Cho
This book explores ancient conceptions of the lesser deities, the so-called angels, in the Ugaritic texts and the Hebrew Bible. It provides readers with fundamental understanding of ancient "angelology" in the religious literatures from Ugarit and Israel.

Quantity:   

A Call to Covenant Love by Jason S. DeRouchie
Profound in its conclusions and targeted toward the exegete, this study offers a clear method for establishing literary macrostructure in OT prose. A brief literary-structural commentary on Deut 5–11 models the text grammatical approach and shows its benefits for exegesis.

Quantity:   

The Semitic Ishtar Cult by George Aaron Barton
Textual evidence regarding the ancient Near Eastern goddess Ishtar is carefully cataloged, transliterated and translated. This is a great resource for anyone interested in the languages and religions of the ancient Near East or Biblical Literature.

Quantity:   

The Interpretation of Dreams in the Ancient Near East by A. Leo Oppenheim
Oppenheim’s foundational study on dreams and their interpretation in the Ancient Near East has long been a standard text for those interested in the role of dreams in the ancient world. With a new introduction by Scott Noegel, this edition presents the complete original study along with its photographs, as well as insights concerning how the book has fared over the past fifty years.

Quantity:   

The Medical Language of St. Luke by William Hobart
This is a highly fascinating and enlightening study of the medical words and phrases common to the third Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles. Hobart demonstrates, using medical sources by Galen and Hippocrates, that the writer of Luke was a physician with knowledge of Greek medical terms.

Quantity:   
previous | up | next
 
Tatu, Silviu. The Qatal//Yiqtol (Yiqtol//Qatal) Verbal Sequence in Semitic Couplets  

 E-mail this product to a friend

Title:The Qatal//Yiqtol (Yiqtol//Qatal) Verbal Sequence in Semitic Couplets
Subtitle:A Case Study in Systemic Functional Grammar with Applications on the Hebrew Psalter and Ugaritic Poetry
Series:Gorgias Ugaritic Studies 3
Availability:In Print
Publisher:Gorgias Press

By Silviu Tatu
ISBN:978-1-59333-958-6
Format:Hardback, Black, 6 x 9 in
 

The first three chapters of this study engage with issues any student of Hebrew poetry interacts with, that can become limitations of such a study as well, concerning mainly epistemological, terminological and methodological issues. It offers a survey of the most representative scholars who engaged with the qatal//yiqtol verbal sequence in Hebrew poetry, and proposes a verse-line delimitation method. The investigation that follows assesses the utility of the Systemic Functional Grammar of English as proposed by M.A.K. Halliday, for our enterprise, only to involve it next in creating a grammar of this type for classical Hebrew. Thus properly equipped, the study proceeds with analysing individual poems and the collection of couplets with qatal//yiqtol verbal sequence, both from Hebrew psalms and Ugaritic poetry.

Hebrew poetry is described by a multitude of features, of which parallelism (at various levels), rhythm, conciseness and ellipsis, inter alia, are particularly important. More recently, the qatal//yiqtol verbal sequence entered the gallery of poetic devices as well. This research defends the idea that the qatal//yiqtol verbal sequence is a poetic device in its own right, used successfully by ancient poets in the Hebrew poetry of the Psaltire and the alphabetic cuneiform tradition of Ugaritic poetry. Evidence of its usage also includes Ancient Hebrew poetry.

This study argues that qatal and yiqtol verbal forms, when part of the qatal//yiqtol verbal sequence in Psalms' poetic couplets, can be used primarily for aesthetic reasons, with no individual reference to time or aspect. Arguably, the Systemic Functional Grammar analysis of lexicogrammar can provide a comprehensive interpretation of form and function, and an integrated approach to phonetics, morphology and syntax.

This work attempts to apply the principles of systemic functionalism for the first time to a corpus of Standard Hebrew prose texts, producing a tentative Systemic Functional Grammar of Hebrew lexicogrammar.

Silviu Tatu is Assistant professor at The Pentecostal Theological Institute in Bucharest. He holds a PhD from the University of Wales. He has written both in Romanian and in English in the field of classical Hebrew poetry.




Tatu, Silviu. The Qatal//Yiqtol (Yiqtol//Qatal) Verbal Sequence in Semitic Couplets
ISBN:978-1-59333-958-6
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$138.00
To get the 5% Gorgias BiblioPerks™ discount, simply login.

Quantity:   



Product Rating: (0.00)   # of Ratings: 0   (Only registered customers can rate)

There are no comments for this product.
Home | Affiliates | Privacy Policy | Copyright © 2003-2005. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by Gorgias FolioFlow, a comprehensive e-commerce solution.