10: The Adjective Flashcards
Recite the table of adjectives
- When gender and number endings are added to adjectives, the nature of the syllables may change, resulting in changes in the vowels.
What are Geminate Roots?
- Those roots in which the second and third consonants are identical
- לבב
- The duplicate consonants can be dealt with in one of two ways:
- gemination
- reduplication
What is the gemination way of dealing with duplicate consonants?
- One consonant is written when there is no ending
- לֵב = heart
- When an ending is added, two consonants are written, indicated by a strong dagesh
- לִבּוֹת = hearts
What is the reduplication way of dealing with duplicate consonants?
- Both consonants are written and a vowel is placed in between
- לֵבָב
How can you recognize Geminate nouns and adjectives?
Geminate nouns and adjectives are often recognizable in the ms form by the presence of a patach under the first of two consonants.
- עַם
How do you deal with Adjectives from Geminate roots?
Adjectives from geminate roots manifest gemination, not reduplication.
What are the three uses of adjectives in Hebrew?
- Attributive
- Predicate
- Substantive
What is the Attributive adjective?
- Describes a noun, for example, “the good boy”.
- must agree in gender, number, and definiteness, and follow the noun it describes.
What is the Predicate adjective?
- Serves as the predicate of a sentence, for example, “the boy is good”.
- when an adjective is predicate, a form of “to be” is supplied in an English translation.
- A predicate adjective must agree in gender and number with the subject but will not have the definite article
- Will tend to come before the noun it describes.
What is the Substantive adjective?
- A substantive adjective is used as a noun.
- Context will indicate substantive use of this sort
- does not have a noun that matches either in gender and number
How do we use adjectives as comparatives?
- Hebrew expresses the comparative by using this order: an adjective + noun/pronoun + מִן + noun/pronoun
- חָכָם הַמֶּלֶךְ מִן־הַכֹּהֵן = “The king is wiser than the priest.”
How can you describe a noun with more than one adjective?
Adjectives may be joined by vav conjunction to describe a single noun. The same rules of agreement apply.
- נָבִיא גָּדוֹל וְחָכָם = “a great and wise prophet”
אַחֵר
other, another
בֵּרִית
covenant
זָקֵן
old, elder