Home Linguistics & Semiotics The Verbal System of Classical Hebrew in the Joseph Story
book: The Verbal System of Classical Hebrew in the Joseph Story
Book

The Verbal System of Classical Hebrew in the Joseph Story

An Approach form Discourse Analysis
  • Yoshinobu Endo
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 1996
Purchasable on brill.com
Access Book Purchase Book
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill
Studia Semitica Neerlandica
This book is in the series

About this book

The present study investigates the function of the verbal forms in biblical Hebrew narrative, using the Joseph story (Gen. 37-50) as a corpus. It demonstrates how the 'tense', 'aspect' and 'sequentiality' function as factors in the choice of the verbal forms in both main clauses and subordinate clauses.
The tense distinction past vs. non-past basically works as a factor in the choice of the freestanding conjugations, except for the stative verb, the verb with a stative sense, the passive construction, or the performative utterance. Moreover, the traditional aspectual opposition complete vs. incomplete also corresponds to QATAL (*qátal) vs. YIQTOL (*yaqtúlu). There appears to be not much difference between these oppositions in describing the function of the above verbal forms (esp. ch.2).
Furthermore, the opposition non-sequential vs. sequential discriminates functionally between YIQTOL and (w,) QATAL (*qatál) in the non-past context, between QATAL and (waY)YIQTOL (*yáqtul) in the past context, and between the IMPV (coh., impv. and juss.) forms and (w,) QATAL (*qatál) in the hortatory context. In each context the former functions as a non-sequential form and the latter as a sequential form.
The phenomenon of sequentiality is purely syntactical. It controls the flow of the story as a discourse function; the non-sequential form stops the flow (i.e. stand still), while the sequential form lets the story flow on.
A thread of discourse is usually traced by sequential forms, but it may include non-sequential forms to signal the difference of discourse level or a discourse boundary. Or each form could play an opposite role to produce special literary effects (chs. 3-7).
Finally, a verbal form in the subordinate clause is chosen not from the viewpoint of the deictic centre of the narrator, but from that of the immediate participant in the main clause (ch. 8).

Author / Editor information

Yoshinobu Endo (Ph.D., University of Bristol) is reverend of the Niiza Bible Church in Japan.

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 17, 2018
eBook ISBN:
9789004358621
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
368
Downloaded on 22.1.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/isbn/9789004358621/html
Scroll to top button