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Topic: Tiberian Hebrew


  
 Tiberian vocalization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tiberian Hebrew is an oral tradition of pronunciation for ancient forms of Hebrew, especially the Hebrew of the Bible, that was given written form by masoretic scholars in the Jewish community at Tiberias in the early middle ages, beginning in the 8th century.
This written form employed symbols added to the Hebrew letters; the symbols are called niqqudot (for vowels) and cantillation signs.
The Tiberian system of vocalisation for the Hebrew Bible represented its own local tradition.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiberian_vocalization

  
 Encyclopedia: Hebrew name
Hebrew devotion to Elohim ( God) is often indicated by adding the suffix אל -ʾēl / -āʾēl, forming names such as מיכאל Mîḵāʾēl and גבריאל Gaḇrîʾēl.
Typically, Hebrew אל -ʾēl was adapted as ـايل -īl, and Hebrew יה -yāh as ـيا -yāʾ.
Most Hebrew names used by Jews (along with many Hebrew names used in Christendom) come from the Jewish Tanakh, known by Christians as the Old Testament.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Hebrew-name

  
 List of Hebrew names: Information From Answers.com
With respect to all varieties of Hebrew and to the different religious and cultural traditions that involve Hebrew, Standard Hebrew and Tiberian Hebrew are preferred for the transliterations of the names.
Standard Hebrew is important because it is the modern internationally-standardized form of the language, as well as one of the official languages of the State of Israel.
Likewise, Tiberian Hebrew is important because it is one of the oldest attestable forms of the language that specifies specific vowels.
http://www.answers.com/topic/list-of-hebrew-names

  
 Names of Jerusalem - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tiberian Hebrew יְרוּשָׁלַםִ / יְרוּשָׁלָםִ Yərûšāláim / Yərûšālāim
This name is derived from the Hebrew Beit Ha-Miqdash ("The Temple" literally "House of the Holiness") which denotes the Temple in Jerusalem not the city itself.
It is the place where, in Abrahamic religions, Abraham attempts the sacrifice of his son.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Jerusalem

  
 Hebrew alphabet - free-definition
The Hebrew alphabet was retained as the alphabet used for writing down the Hebrew language during its rebirth in the end of the 19th century, despite several unsuccessful attempts to replace it with the Latin alphabet.
The number of letters in the Hebrew alphabet, their order, their names, and their phonetic values are virtually identical to those of the Aramaic alphabet, as both Hebrews and Arameans borrowed the Phoenician alphabet for their uses during the end of the 2nd millennium BC.
This script was borrowed by the Hebrews during the 12th or 11th century BC, and around the 9th century BC, a distinct Hebrew variant, the original "Hebrew script", emerged.
http://www.free-definition.com/Hebrew-alphabet.html

  
 Hebrews Information
Hebrews are also referred to as the Children of Israel, because they are all descended from the Patriarch Israel, also known as Jacob.
Many Hebrews were originally Canaanites, Amorites, Hittites, Hurrians and Luwian s who gradually distinguished themselves based upon a religious difference, most notably the worship of the Canaanite god El rather than Hadad (or Adad) who was then favored in the Canaanite pantheon.
The most influential group of Hebrews to emerge from the 12th century BCE Hebrew migrations were from a group which had long settled in Egypt and were known as Israel.
http://www.echostatic.com/index.php?title=Hebrews

  
 Khan
‘Tiberian Hebrew phonology’, in A. Kaye (ed.), Phonologies of Asia and Africa, Eisenbrauns, 1997, 85-102.
‘A Genizah fragment of a Judaeo-Arabic lament for the Holy Land ’ [in Hebrew], in Mas
‘Standardisation and variation in the orthography of Hebrew Bible and Arabic Qur’an manuscripts’, Manuscripts of the Middle East V (1990-91), 53-58.
http://www.oriental.cam.ac.uk/khan.html

  
 Encyclopedia: Names of the Levant
Tiberian Hebrew כְּנַעַן / כְּנָעַן Kənáʿan / Kənāʿan
Tiberian Hebrew פְּלֶשֶׁת / פְּלָשֶׁת Pəléšeṯ / Pəlāšeṯ
Standard Hebrew פְּלֶשֶׁת / פְּלָשֶׁת Pəléšet / Pəlášet
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Names-of-the-Levant

  
 Irad - LearnThis.Info Enclyclopedia
Irad ( עירד "Wild ass; dragon", Standard Hebrew ʿIrad, Tiberian Hebrew ʿÎrāḏ), in the Bible, was one of the antediluvian patriarchs, grandson of Cain and the father of Mehujael.
http://encyclopedia.learnthis.info/i/ir/irad.html

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Hebrew Language and Literature
In the sixteenth century the study of Hebrew, hitherto almost exclusively confined to the Jews, was taken up by Christian scholars, and under the influence of the Protestant principle of the Bible as the sole rule of faith it received a great impetus.
In fact, it is claimed by some that the Hebrew of the Old Testament betrays evidences of as great a disintegration and departure from its assumed typical perfection as does the vulgar Arabic of to-day from the classical idiom of the golden literary age of Islam.
As the people no longer understood the classical Hebrew, and were unable to follow the official reading of the Old Testament in the synagogues, it became necessary to translate it into the vernacular and explain it to them.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07176a.htm

  
 Canaan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistic terms, Canaanite refers to the common ancestor of closely related Semitic languages such as Hebrew, and Ugaritic, and was the first language to use a Semitic alphabet, from which the others derived their scripts; see Canaanite languages.
Similarly, there are occasional instances in the Hebrew Bible in which "Canaanite" is used as a synonym for "merchant", presumably indicating the aspect of Canaanites with which the anonymous author was most familiar.
Not, as was at first thought by some, specially the Israelites, but all those tribes of land-hungry nomads ("Hebrews") who were attracted by the wealth and luxury of the settled regions, and sought to appropriate it for themselves.
http://www.encyclopedia-online.info/Canaan

  
 Yemenite Jews - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The oldest Yemenite manuscripts are those of the Hebrew Bible, which the Yemenite Jews call "Taj" ("crown").
Yemenite Jews ( &;, Standard Hebrew Temani, Tiberian Hebrew Têmānî ; plural תימנים, Standard Hebrew Temanim, Tiberian Hebrew Têmānîm) are those Jews who live, or whose recent ancestors lived, in Yemen ( תימן "far south", Standard Hebrew Teman, Tiberian Hebrew Têmān), a nation on the southern tip of the Arabian peninsula.
Among the Yemenite poets who wrote Hebrew and Arabic hymns modeled after the Spanish school, mention may be made of Yaḥya al-Dhahri and the members of the Al-Shabbezi family.
http://www.netipedia.com/index.php/Yemenite_Jews

  
 Ashkenazi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ashkenaz in later Hebrew tradition became identified with the peoples of Germany, and in particular to the area along the Rhine where the Allemani tribe once lived (compare the French and Spanish words Allemagne and Alemania, respectively, for Germany).
The term Ashkenazi also refers to the nusach ( Hebrew, "liturgical tradition") used by Ashkenazi Jews in their Siddur (prayer book).
In the first half of the eleventh century, Hai Gaon refers to questions that had been addressed to him from "Ashkenaz", by which he undoubtedly means Germany.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashkenazi

  
 eberite
people and Angels both said unto God I am a Hebrew, andquot;Hebrewandquot; from the descendants of Eber or Eberite, patronymic, in Heaven from God, on Earth of or from a woman.
The word for Hebrew is from `Ibriy (ib-ree'); which means; an Eberite (i.e.
Strong's Hebrew Bible Dictionary - SpeedBible by johnhurt.com
http://eberite.networklive.org

  
 ENGLISH ENCYCLOPAEDIA - Biblical Hebrew language
The Biblical Hebrew language is the ancient form of the Hebrew language as spoken by the Israelites, in which the Hebrew Bible was originally written.
Its preserved descendants are the Samaritan Hebrew language and the various Jewish dialects of Hebrew.
• Samaritan Hebrew language (liturgical) • Mishnaic Hebrew language (Jews) &; Tiberian Hebrew language (liturgical) • Yemenite Hebrew language (liturgical) • Sephardi Hebrew language (liturgical) • Ashkenazi Hebrew language (liturgical) • Modern Hebrew language (State of Israel)
http://encyclopaedic.net/english/bi/biblical_hebrew_language.html

  
 Sephardi biography .ms
In the vernacular of modern-day Israel, the word Sephardi has also come to include the immigrant Jewish communities that were indigenous to the various countries of the Near East, most notably those of the Yemen, Iraq and Iran whom are now resident in Israel, and have no ancestral ties to Spain or Portugal.
The term Sephardi can also describe the nusach ( Hebrew language, "liturgical tradition") used by Sephardi Jews in their Siddur (prayer book).
Note that the term Nusach Sepharad does not refer to the liturgy generally recited by Sephardim, but rather to an alternative European litergy used by many Chassidim.
http://sephardic.biography.ms

  
 Hebrew alphabet and pronunciation
Hebrew, a Semitic language and the official language of Israel.
Ancient Berber, Arabic, Divehi Akuru, Hebrew, Mandaic, Middle Persian, Nabataean, Parthian, Phoenician, Proto-Hebrew, Psalter, Sabaean, Samaritan, South Arabian, Syriac, Tifinagh, Ugaritic
Long vowels can be indicated by the letters alef, vav, and yod.
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/hebrew.htm

  
 Urim and Thummim - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
According to the Hebrew Bible, stones used for "an" Urim and Thummim were kept in the breastplate of Aaron, the brother of Moses.
According to teachings of Judaism, a small parchment with God's holy name, the Tetragramaton, inscribed on it was slipped into an opening under the Urim and Thummim on the high priest's breast plate, which caused the breastplate to "glow" and thereby "transmit messages" from God to the Children of Israel.
The earliest reference to Urim and Thummim in the Hebrew Bible is that Aaron carried them with him as High Priest.
http://www.websitesgo.com/index.php/Urim_and_Thummim

  
 Hebrew phonology
Hebrew has two kinds of stress ("taa'm"): on the last syllable ("milra'") and on the penultimate syllable (the one preceding the last, "mile'l").
Hebrew in Its West Semitic Setting: A Comparative Survey of Non-Masoretic Hebrew Dialects and Traditions: Part Two, Phonetics and Phonology, Part T
All Hebrew consonant phonemes are represented by a single letter.
http://news-server.org/h/he/hebrew_phonology.html

  
 Webzoeken.com Tiberian
A Grammar of Samaritan Hebrew Based on the Recitation of the...
(Redirected from Tiberian Hebrew) Tiberian Hebrew is an oral tradition of pronunciation for ancient forms of Hebrew, especially the Hebrew of the Bible, that was given written form by
The Hebrew Bible with pre- Masoretic Tiberian vocalization.
http://www.webzoeken.com/s1-tiberian.html

  
 Mizrahi_Jew
Arabic was their mother tongue (or Farsi for those of Iran), and for some it still is. Hebrew was mainly considered a language of prayer.
A number of notable philosophical, religious, and grammatical works were written in the Arabic language which was modified with the employment of Hebrew characters, and often incorporating Arabic vowel marks.
From their initial transition to Israel, the Mizrahim have distinguished themselves from their Ashkenazi and Sephardi counterparts, in culture, customs and language.
http://goc.subdomain.de/Mizrahi_Jews

  
 history_of_hebrew by David Steinberg
Mishnaic Hebrew probably preserves many words for work-a-day objects and activities that were never mentioned in the Bible due to the subjects discussed in the Bible or, more accurately, not discussed.
Hebrew Eliyah = my God is the LORD — the language can be partly reconstructed even from such meager data.
In the King James Bible this indicates that the words are not found in the Hebrew.
http://www.uscj.org/canadian/ottawaasc/history_of_hebrew.htm

  
 Purim (פורים "Lots," Standard Hebrew Purim, Tiberian Hebrew Pûrîm
Purim (פורים "Lots," Standard Hebrew Purim, Tiberian Hebrew Pûrîm: plural of פור pûr "Lot," from Akkadian pūru) is a Jewish holiday that commemorates the deliverance of the Persian Jews from the plot of the evil Haman to exterminate them, as recorded in the biblical Book of Esther.
According to that book the feast was instituted as a national one by the book's protagonists, Mordecai and Esther.
In leap-years on the Hebrew calendar, Purim is celebrated in the second month of Adar, but by the Karaites in the first.
http://www.milechai.com/judaism/purim.html

  
 The world's top abraham websites
Abraham ( &; "Father/Leader of many", Tiberian Hebrew ʾAḇrāhām, Standard Hebrew Avraham ; Arabic &; Ibrāhīm) is the name given in the Book of Genesis to the ancestor of the Jews.
In the New Testament Abraham is mentioned prominently as a man of faith (see e.g., Hebrews 11), and the apostle Paul uses him as an example of salvation by faith (in e.g.
As the father of Midian, Sheba and other Arabian tribes (25:1-4), it seems that some degree of kinship was felt by the Hebrews with the dwellers of the more distant south, and it is characteristic of the genealogies that the mothers (Sarah, Hagar and Keturah) are in the descending scale as regards purity of blood.
http://dirs.org/wiki-article-tab.cfm/abraham

  
 ipedia.com: Palestine Article
Palestine ( Tiberian Hebrew פלשת Pəléšeṯ / Pəlāšeṯ, Latin Syria Palæstina, Standard Hebrew פלשתינה Palestina, ארץ־ישראל Éreẓ-Yisraʾel, Arabic &; Filasṭīn, Standard Hebrew (of modern Arabic political term) פלסטין Filastin), is a region in the Middle East extending inland from the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea.
Several names for the region are found in the Bible: (Eretz) Yisrael "(land of) Israel", Eretz Ha-Ivrim "land of the Hebrews", "land flowing with milk and honey", "land that [God] swore to your fathers to assign to you", " Holy Land ", and "land of the LORD".
"Palestine" ( Hebrew פלשת Pəléšeth, P(e)léshet) is used in the Bible to denote the coastal region inhabited by the Philistines, whose five principal cities were Gaza, Ashdod, Ekron, Gath, and Ashkelon.
http://www.ipedia.com/palestine.html

  
 [No title]
Reuben, Moab, and the Hebrew Bible The purpose of this session is to consider how to integrate the archaeological record of the Transjordan and the text of the Hebrew Bible into a single narrative story.
Reuben, Moab, and the Hebrew Bible Forwarded on behalf of the undersigned, to whom responses and inquiries should be directed.
Section Title - Tribes of the Testament The aim of this section is understand how the individual tribes of the Hebrew Bible became part of the biblical tradition of Israel.
http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/ANE/ANE-DIGEST/1998/v1998.n088

  
 Adam and Eve
While Adam is also regarded as the first human in Islam, he is also a prophet as well, in the sense that he was one of the people to whom God spoke.
Eve is not mentioned by name in the Quran, but referred to as Adam's spouse; however, her name is given as Hawwa, as in Hebrew, by Islamic tradition.
According to the Book of Genesis of the Bible and to the Quran, Adam ( אדם "Dust; mankind", Standard Hebrew Adam, Tiberian Hebrew ʾĀḏām, Arabic &; ʾĀdam) was the first man created by God.
http://www.centipedia.com/index.php?title=Adam

  
 Abel - free-definition
In the Book of Genesis, Abel ( &;, Standard Hebrew Hével / Hável, Tiberian Hebrew Héḇel / Hāḇel ; Arabic &; Hābīl) was the second son of Adam.
One proposed Hebrew etymology for the word "Abel" is: "AB", meaning "source" in Hebrew, and "EL" meaning "God".
The New Testament says that "by faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain" ( Hebrews 11:4), and that Cain slew Abel "because his own works were evil and his brother's righteous" (1 John 3:12).
http://www.free-definition.com/Abel.html

  
 Zedekiah
Zedekiah or Tzidkiyáhu ( צדקיהו "Righteous of/is the LORD " Standard Hebrew Ẓidqiyyáhu Tiberian Hebrew Ṣiḏqiyyāhû) was the last king of Judah.
His original name was Mattaniah or Matanyáhu ( מתניהו "Gift of/is the LORD " Standard Hebrew Mattanyáhu Tiberian Hebrew Mattanyāhû); but when Nebuchadnezzar II placed him on the throne as successor to Jehoiachin he changed his name to Zedekiah.
Albright has dated his reign to 597 - 587 BC while Thiele offers the dates 597 - 586 BC He was the third son of Josiah and his mother's name was Hamutal daughter of Jeremiah of Libnah thus he was the of Jehoahaz ( 2 Kings 23:31; 24:17 18).
http://www.freeglossary.com/Zedekiah

  
 Lot - Theopedia
In the Bible, Lot ( לוט "Hidden, covered", Standard Hebrew Lot, Tiberian Hebrew Lôṭ ; Qur’anic Arabic &; Lūṭ) was the nephew of the patriarch, Abraham or Abram.
The second was called Amon, in Hebrew meaning: 'From our nation' and later became the patriarch of the nation of Amon.
The first son born was later called 'Moav' -meaning in Hebrew -from the father [meh-Av].
http://www.theopedia.com/Lot

  
 Talk:Judah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The word יהודה does not mean "praise." According to Genesis 29:35, Leah chose the name to resemble the Hebrew word for " thanks ", not "praise", and the word isn't the same in any case—"thanks" is תודה ( toda) or הודיה ( hodaya), not יהודה.
Judah ( יהודה "Praise", Standard Hebrew Yəhuda, Tiberian Hebrew Yəhûḏāh)
If there are no objections, I'll change all these definitions to be accurate.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Judah

  
 Articles - Niqqud
In Hebrew orthography, Niqqud or Nikkud ( Standard Hebrew נִקּוּד, Biblical Hebrew נְקֻדּוֹת, Tiberian Hebrew Nəquddôṯ "vowels") is the system of diacritical vowel points (or vowel marks) in the Hebrew alphabet.
Non-speakers of Hebrew give their greatest attention to vowel points (usually without using the word "niqqud") in the context of controversy over the interpretation of those written with the Tetragrammaton -- written as יְהוָה in Hebrew.
For most consonants the dagesh is written within the consonant, near the middle if possible, but the exact position varies from letter to letter; some letters do not have an open area in the middle, and in these cases it is written usually beside the letter, as with yod.
http://www.free-biz.org/articles/Niqqud

  
 Amazon.co.uk: Books: The Hebrew Bible: With Pre-Masoretic Tiberian Vocalization. "the Prophets" According to ...
Amazon.co.uk: Books: The Hebrew Bible: With Pre-Masoretic Tiberian Vocalization.
Top of Page : The Hebrew Bible: With Pre-Masoretic Tiberian Vocalization.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/9004020969

  
 Tiberian Hebrew Phonology (American Schools of Oriental Research Dissertation Ser.) - Malone, Joseph L.
A book on the Hebrew language, it's dialects, Israel, Tiberias, and phonology.
Tiberian Hebrew Phonology (American Schools of Oriental Research Dissertation Ser.) - Malone, Joseph L. Home
Author Name: Malone, Joseph L. Title: Tiberian Hebrew Phonology (American Schools of Oriental Research Dissertation Ser.)
http://www.funstons.com/si/013326.html

  
 A Fast, Practical Method For Checking the Accentual Structure and Integrity Of Tiberian-Pointed Biblical Texts
In the late 70s, for example, G. Weil utilized a machine-readable biblical text to create an accentual concordance for parts of the Hebrew Bible (Weil 1978).
The Syntax of Masoretic Accents in the Hebrew Bible
Price, James D. The Syntax of Masoretic Accents in the Hebrew Bible
http://www.goerwitz.com/papers/accents/docs/accents.html

  
 Ezra Information
According to Rabbinic Tradition, Ezra collected and edited the Cannon of the Hebrew Bible.
Related Topics: Standard Hebrew, Tiberian Hebrew, Standard Hebrew, Tiberian Hebrew, Babylon, Jerusalem, 459 BC, Book of Ezra, Bible, Seraiah, Phinehas, Aaron, Darius I of Persia, Jerusalem, 445 BC,
Abuses were rectified, and arrangements for the temple service completed, and now nothing remained but the dedication of the walls of the city (Neh.
http://www.topicguide.com/Ezra.html

  
 ENGLISH ENCYCLOPAEDIA - Ancient Hebrew language
The Ancient Hebrew language is a blanket term for Hebrew dialects used in ancient times.
Hebrew language (as a category) • Biblical Hebrew language • Mishnaic Hebrew language • Tiberian Hebrew language
If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page.
http://encyclopaedic.net/english/an/ancient_hebrew_language.html

  
 [No title]
Tiberian Hebrew phonology is front and centre in today's linguistic theorizing: crucial in fact, in part because of John McCarthy and his colleagues and students (Kager 1999).
Garr, W. “The Seghol and Segholization in Hebrew”.
Churchyard, “Topics in Tiberian Biblical Hebrew Metrical Phonology and Prosodics”.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~decaen/papers/Coetzee_review.doc

  
 BIGpedia - Iyar - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online
Iyar ( Standard Hebrew אִייָּר Iyyar, Tiberian Hebrew אִיָּר ʾIyyār : from Akkadian ayyaru "Rosette; blossom") is the eighth month of the ecclesiastical year and the second month of the civil year on the Hebrew calendar.
Yom Ha'atzma'ut (Hebrew: Independence Day) - Iyar 5
Yom Yerushalayim (Hebrew: Jerusalem Day) - Iyar 28
http://www.bigpedia.com/encyclopedia/Iyar

  
 The Word in Tiberian Hebrew: Abstract
The text of the Hebrew Bible (Elliger and Rudolph 1977) provides us with several conflicting notions of word.
The Biblical text consists of two main layers, and the written word - in the sense of letters surrounded by blank space - differs in each layer.
Thus, a study of the word in Biblical Hebrew bears on issues of the syntax-phonology mapping in contemporary linguistic theory, as well as on the notion of levels in Lexical Phonology and Morphology.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~dresher/wordabs.html

  
 Henry Churchyard's linguistics page
Supplement G to Chapter 3: List of Verses with both Pausal forms and Stress-shifted Disjunctive Non-pausal forms
A list of cases of antepenultimate-syllable stress in the Hebrew Bible, and of other forms in which stress can be considered to be in some way antepenultimate (12k).
Discrepancies between the Tiberian Hebrew Accentual and Pausal Systems
http://www.crossmyt.com/hc/linghebr

  
 Monomoraic Heavy Syllables
Syllable Weight in Shipibo, Tiberian Hebrew and Kashmiri
We will see Shipibo and Tiberian Hebrew cases that show that their grammars only need non-moraic information for categorizing syllables.
This language has an enormous importance because it shows its grammar needs both moraic and non-moraic information for categorizing syllables and these two kinds of phonological information are interacting; that is, they are in a conflict.
http://www.eden.rutgers.edu/~joselias/El%20Peso%20Silabico%20en%20Shipibo,%20Hebreo%20Tiberiano%20y%20Kashmiri.htm

  
 The Israel Virtual Bookstore -- Books : Hebrew language
The Israel Virtual Bookstore -- Books : Hebrew language
Institutionalized Language Planning : Documents and Analysis of the Revival of Hebrew (Contributions to the Sociology of Language Series, No 23)
http://www.iguide.co.il/books/english/463.html

  
 Publications
"Hidden Codes in the Hebrew Bible?" Glot International 3, 8, October 1998, p.
"The Prosodic Basis of the Tiberian Hebrew System of Accents," Language 70, 1-52, 1994.
"The Word in Tiberian Hebrew," to appear in Kristin Hanson and Sharon Inkelas (eds.), The Nature of the Word: Essays in Honor of Paul Kiparsky,, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., in press.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~dresher/publications.html

  
 Herman Melville - encyclopedia article about Herman Melville.
But once again tending to outrun the tastes of his readers, Melville's poetic masterpiece, the epic length verse-narrative Clarel, about a student's pilgrimage to the Holy Land The phrase The Holy Land (Arabic &; al-Arḍ ul-Muqaddasah ; Hebrew ארץ הקודש;, Standard Hebrew Éreẓ haQodeš, Tiberian Hebrew
There were various names used to describe the war itself, its combatants, armies, and battles (see the article Naming the American Civil War).
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Herman%20Melville

  
 Humanist Archives Vol. 6 : 6.0579 Qs: Romantics; Translation; History; Hebrew (4/86)
I am wondering whether there are any other internet-accessible
cantillated Hebrew texts I could adapt it to, or run it as-is on (if
Tiberian family MSS, and could be useful in analyzing their systematic
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/v06/0578.html

  
 Castl - Publications
Opacity, transparency and unification in the phonology of Tiberian Hebrew
http://uit.no/castl/3055/49

  
 Oriental Languages and Literatures - 8400064763 - Nesiga (retraction of word stress) in Tiberian Hebrew / by E.J. ...
Nesiga (retraction of word stress) in Tiberian Hebrew / by E.J. Revell.
Oriental Languages and Literatures - 8400064763 - Nesiga (retraction of word stress) in Tiberian Hebrew / by E.J. Revell.
http://www.pitbossannie.com/iss-pj-8400064763.html

  
 Malone (1993) Tiberian Hebrew phonology
Hebrew language; Dialects; Phonology; Phonology, Historical; Israel; Tiberias
http://www.getcited.org/pub/103011583

  
 Yemenite Hebrew language - Definition of Yemenite Hebrew language by Webster's Online Dictionary
Yemenite Hebrew language not found in the Dictionary
Yemenite Hebrew language - Definition of Yemenite Hebrew language by Webster's Online Dictionary
http://www.webster-dictionary.org/definition/Yemenite%20Hebrew%20language

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