The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition

This article examines the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition, with a basic comparison with the pronunciation of identical letters in other present-day traditions. It is notable that in the Yemenite tradition also there are differences of opinion as to the pronunciation of these letters as a result of the effect of their pronunciation in other present-day traditions. In this article, we present the fundamental views with regard to the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters as well as their possible pronunciations in light of the grammar rules evident from the grammarians. The article does not purport to provide a historical, developmental or chronological investigation of the grammar rules; rather, it focuses on one specific topic involving the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite tradition.

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Main Author: Zur,Uri
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: University of Pretoria 2020
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-94222020000100025
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spelling oai:scielo:S0259-942220200001000252020-11-06The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish traditionZur,Uri Bible pronunciation Shvanaʻ-naḥ identical consecutive letters Yemenite Jewish vocalisation This article examines the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition, with a basic comparison with the pronunciation of identical letters in other present-day traditions. It is notable that in the Yemenite tradition also there are differences of opinion as to the pronunciation of these letters as a result of the effect of their pronunciation in other present-day traditions. In this article, we present the fundamental views with regard to the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters as well as their possible pronunciations in light of the grammar rules evident from the grammarians. The article does not purport to provide a historical, developmental or chronological investigation of the grammar rules; rather, it focuses on one specific topic involving the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite tradition. University of Pretoria HTS Theological Studies v.76 n.1 20202020-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-94222020000100025en
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libraryname SciELO
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author Zur,Uri
spellingShingle Zur,Uri
The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition
author_facet Zur,Uri
author_sort Zur,Uri
title The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition
title_short The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition
title_full The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition
title_fullStr The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition
title_full_unstemmed The pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition
title_sort pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the yemenite jewish tradition
description This article examines the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite Jewish tradition, with a basic comparison with the pronunciation of identical letters in other present-day traditions. It is notable that in the Yemenite tradition also there are differences of opinion as to the pronunciation of these letters as a result of the effect of their pronunciation in other present-day traditions. In this article, we present the fundamental views with regard to the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters as well as their possible pronunciations in light of the grammar rules evident from the grammarians. The article does not purport to provide a historical, developmental or chronological investigation of the grammar rules; rather, it focuses on one specific topic involving the pronunciation of identical consecutive letters in the Yemenite tradition.
publisher University of Pretoria
publishDate 2020
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-94222020000100025
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