© Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2020 | doi:10.1163/15685330-12341446
Vetus Testamentum (2020) 1-18
brill.com/vt
Vetus
Testamentum
Non-Accusative ʾt and the Syntactic Profile of
Late Biblical Hebrew
Nili Samet
Faculty of Jewish Studies, Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
nilisamet@gmail.com
Abstract
This paper examines the widespread classification of ʾt before the nominative as a
trademark of Late Biblical Hebrew. The paper begins by defining the nature and scope
of this syntactic usage and reviewing its possible explanations. Next, a full list of the
relevant examples is presented and alleged post-biblical cognates are examined. This
data leads to the conclusion that contrary to the common scholarly sentiment, ʾt
nominativi cannot be considered a late feature within Biblical Hebrew. The evidence
from Mishnaic Hebrew that was erroneously associated with ʾt nominativi enables,
however, the identification of a hitherto unknown late biblical structure, namely, the
demonstrative ʾt ʾšr. Biblical occurrences of this usage are recognizable in Jeremiah,
Zechariah, and Qohelet. The paper concludes that while ʾt nominativi is by no means
a late usage, the demonstrative ʾt ʾšr may be classified as late with more certainty. This
conclusion calls for a re-examination of the syntactic profile of LBH as drawn in the
influential works of the field, chiefly those by Kropat and Polzin.
Keywords
Biblical Hebrew – syntax – Late Biblical Hebrew – linguistic dating
The syntax of Late Biblical Hebrew has been continually studied during the
last two centuries. Scholars have gathered and analyzed essential syntactic
characteristics of this linguistic conglomeration. Of the numerous studies