Nominal possessive constructions in the early modern Hasidic Hebrew tale
Nominal possessive constructions in the early modern Hasidic Hebrew tale
This paper constitutes the first linguistic analysis of nominal possessive constructions in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Hasidic Hebrew hagiographic tales. Such analysis is necessary because it sheds much-needed light on the grammatical structure of this prominent but largely unstudied early modern Eastern European form of Hebrew. Hasidic Hebrew possessive constructions exhibit a variety of noteworthy features, namely non-standard uses of the construct chain including definiteness of the construct noun, double definiteness, and split construct chains; construct chains with adjectives in the absolute position; the productiveness and widespread use of the construct chain; the tendency to favour the post-Biblical Hebrew possessive particle shel only in certain syntactic contexts; and the employment of the Aramaic particle - de- specifically to express geographical and temporal relationships. These phenomena reflect a mix of various strata of Hebrew as well as Aramaic, Yiddish, and independent elements that combine to form a unique system distinct from other varieties of Hebrew.
CITATION: Kahn, Lily. Nominal possessive constructions in the early modern Hasidic Hebrew tale . : Taylor & Francis Group , 2013. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 76, No. 2, 2013, pp. 271-287 - Available at: https://library.au.int/nominal-possessive-constructions-early-modern-hasidic-hebrew-tale-4