Samaritan Hebrew Explained

Samaritan Hebrew
Region:Israel and Palestinian territories, predominantly in Nablus and Holon
Extinct:c. 2nd century
Speakers2:survives in liturgical use
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Afro-Asiatic
Fam2:Semitic
Fam3:West Semitic
Fam4:Central Semitic
Fam5:Northwest Semitic
Fam6:Canaanite
Fam7:Biblical Hebrew
Script:Samaritan abjad
Iso3:smp
Lingua:12-AAB
Glotto:sama1313
Glottorefname:Samaritan
Notice:IPA

Samaritan Hebrew () is a reading tradition used liturgically by the Samaritans for reading the Ancient Hebrew language of the Samaritan Pentateuch, in contrast to Tiberian Hebrew among the Jewish people.

For the Samaritans, Ancient Hebrew ceased to be a spoken everyday language and was succeeded by Samaritan Aramaic, which itself ceased to be a spoken language some time between the 10th and 12th centuries and was succeeded by Arabic (or more specifically Samaritan Palestinian Arabic).

The phonology of Samaritan Hebrew is very similar to that of Samaritan Arabic, and is used by the Samaritans in prayer. Today, the spoken vernacular among Samaritans is evenly split between Modern Israeli Hebrew and Palestinian Arabic, depending on whether they reside in Holon (Israel) or in Shechem (i.e. Nablus, in Palestine's Area A).

History and discovery

The Samaritan language first became known in detail to the Western world with the publication of a manuscript of the Samaritan Pentateuch in 1631 by Jean Morin.[1] In 1616 the traveler Pietro della Valle had purchased a copy of the text in Damascus, and this manuscript, now known as Codex B, was deposited in a Parisian library.

Between 1957 and 1977 Ze'ev Ben-Haim published in five volumes his monumental Hebrew work on the Hebrew and Aramaic traditions of the Samaritans. Ben-Haim, whose views prevail today, proved that modern Samaritan Hebrew is not very different from Second Temple Samaritan, which itself was a language shared with the other residents of the region before it was supplanted by Aramaic.

Orthography

See main article: article, Samaritan alphabet and Samaritan vocalization.

Samaritan Hebrew is written in the Samaritan alphabet, a direct descendant of the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet, which in turn is a variant of the earlier Proto-Sinaitic script.

The Samaritan alphabet is close to the script that appears on many Ancient Hebrew coins and inscriptions.[2] By contrast, all other varieties of Hebrew, as written by Jews, employ the later square Hebrew alphabet, which is in fact a variation of the Aramaic alphabet that Jews began using in the Babylonian captivity following the exile of the Kingdom of Judah in the 6th century BCE. During the 3rd century BCE, Jews began to use this stylized "square" form of the script used by the Achaemenid Empire for Imperial Aramaic, its chancellery script[3] while the Samaritans continued to use the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet, which evolved into the Samaritan alphabet.

In modern times, a cursive variant of the Samaritan alphabet is used in personal affects.

Letter pronunciation

Consonants

Name
Samaritan Letter
Square Hebrew (Ktav Ashuri) letter
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Vowels

Phonology

Consonants

Samaritan Hebrew consonants
LabialAlveolarPalatalVelar~UvularPharyn-
geal
Glottal
plainemp.plainemp.
Nasalpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Stopvoicelesspronounced as /ink/pronounced as /tˤ/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
voicedpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /link/
Fricativevoicelesspronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /sˤ/pronounced as /ink/
voicedpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Approximantpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Trillpronounced as /ink/
Samaritan Hebrew shows the following consonantal differences from Biblical Hebrew: The original phonemes pronounced as / / do not have spirantized allophones, though at least some did originally in Samaritan Hebrew (evidenced in the preposition "in" ב- pronounced as //av// or pronounced as //b//). pronounced as / / has shifted to pronounced as //f// (except occasionally pronounced as / / > pronounced as //bː//). pronounced as / / has shifted to pronounced as //b// everywhere except in the conjunction ו- 'and' where it is pronounced as pronounced as //w//. pronounced as / / has merged with pronounced as //ʃ//, unlike in all other contemporary Hebrew traditions in which it is pronounced pronounced as //s//. The laryngeals pronounced as //ʔ ħ h ʕ// have become pronounced as //ʔ// or null everywhere, except before pronounced as //a ɒ// where pronounced as / / sometimes become pronounced as //ʕ//. pronounced as //q// is sometimes pronounced as pronounced as /[ʔ]/, though not in Pentateuch reading, as a result of influence from Samaritan Arabic. pronounced as //q// may also be pronounced as pronounced as /[χ]/, but this occurs only rarely and in fluent reading.

Vowels

Samaritan vowels!! Front! Back
Closealign=center pronounced as /i/ pronounced as /iː/align=center pronounced as /u/ pronounced as /uː/
Midalign=center pronounced as /e/ pronounced as /eː/align=center (pronounced as /o/)
Openalign=center pronounced as /a/ pronounced as /aː/align=center pronounced as /ɒ/ pronounced as /ɒː/
Reduced(pronounced as /ə/)

Phonemic length is contrastive, e.g. pronounced as //rɒb// רב 'great' vs. pronounced as //rɒːb// רחב 'wide'.[4] Long vowels are usually the result of the elision of guttural consonants.

pronounced as //i// and pronounced as //e// are both realized as pronounced as /[ə]/ in closed post-tonic syllables, e.g. pronounced as //bit// בית 'house' pronounced as //abbət// הבית 'the house' pronounced as //ɡer// גר pronounced as //aɡɡər// הגר. In other cases, stressed pronounced as //i// shifts to pronounced as //e// when that syllable is no longer stressed, e.g. pronounced as //dabbirti// דברתי but דברתמה pronounced as //dabbertimma//. pronounced as //u// and pronounced as //o// only contrast in open post-tonic syllables, e.g. ידו pronounced as //jedu// 'his hand' ידיו pronounced as //jedo// 'his hands', where pronounced as //o// stems from a contracted diphthong. In other environments, pronounced as //o// appears in closed syllables and pronounced as //u// in open syllables, e.g. דור pronounced as //dor// דורות pronounced as //durot//.

Stress

Stress generally differs from other traditions, being found usually on the penultimate and sometimes on the ultimate.

Grammar

Pronouns

Personal

singularplural
1st person ā̊nā̊ki ā̊nā̊nnu
2nd personmale åttå attimma
female åtti (note the final yodh) attən
3rd personmale ū imma
female ī inna

Demonstrative

thisthat
singularmasc alaz (written with a he at the beginning).
fem zē'ot
plural illa

Relative

Who, which: éšar.

Interrogative

Noun

When suffixes are added, ê and ô in the last syllable may become î and û: bôr (Judean bohr) "pit" > búrôt "pits". Note also af "anger" > éppa "her anger".

Segolates behave more or less as in other Hebrew varieties: beţen "stomach" > báţnek "your stomach", ke′seph "silver" > ke′sefánu (Judean Hebrew kaspe′nu) "our silver", dérek > dirkakimma "your (m. pl.) road" but áreş (in Judean Hebrew: e'rets) "earth" > árşak (Judean Hebrew arts-ekha) "your earth".

Article

The definite article is a- or e-, and causes gemination of the following consonant, unless it is a guttural; it is written with a he, but as usual, the h is silent. Thus, for example: énnar / ánnar = "the youth"; ellêm = "the meat"; a'émor = "the donkey".

Number

Regular plural suffixes are

Dual is sometimes -ayem (Judean Hebrew: a′yim), šenatayem "two years", usually -êm like the plural yédêm "hands" (Judean Hebrew yadhayim.)

Tradition of the Divine Name

Samaritans have the tradition of either spelling out loud with the Samaritan letters

"Yohth, Ie', Baa, Ie' "

or saying "Shema" meaning "(The Divine) Name" in Aramaic, similar to Judean Hebrew "Ha-Shem" .

Verbs

Affixes
perfectimperfect
singular pluralsingular plural
1st person-ti-nue-ne-
2nd personmale-ta-tímmati-te- -un
female-ti-tênti- -ite- -na
3nd personmale--uyi-yi- -u
female-a?ti-ti- -inna

Particles

Prepositions

"in, using", pronounced:

"as, like", pronounced:

"to" pronounced:

"and" pronounced:

Other prepositions:

Conjunctions

Adverbs

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=IOAtAAAAYAAJ Exercitationes ecclesiasticae in utrumque Samaritanorum Pentateuchum
  2. Samaritan Language and Literature.
  3. Book: 1993 . A History of the Hebrew Language . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge, England . 0-521-55634-1.
  4. (while Ben-Hayyim notates four degrees of vowel length, he concedes that only his "fourth degree" has phonemic value)