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Paleo-Hebrew alphabet

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleo-Hebrew_alphabet

Parallel Hebrew Old Testament JPG Paleo-Hebrew (Before 585 B.C.)

https://www.hebrewoldtestament.com

Paleohebrew Bible JPG 

https://fdocuments.in/document/paleo-hebrew-scriptures-568204287c49c.html?page=1

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Hebrew alphabet

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_alphabet

𐤉𐤄𐤅𐤄

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5. Mojs. 3:21

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Sudije 2:7

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2.Mojs. 7:14

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Jeshua 1.1

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Sudije 2:7

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Nehemija 8:17

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Hebrew Theophoric Names and The Name of God

Hebrejska teoforska imena i Božje ime

Hebräische theophorische Namen und der Name Gottes

1.

Jeshajahu -  יְשַׁעְיָ֗הוּ -Isaiah, Izaja, Jesaja  2.Kraljev 20:9

Jehovshua -  יְהֹושֻֽׁעַ  -Joshua, Jehoshua, Isus, Jesus Brojevi 13:16

2.

Natanjahu -   נְתַנְיָהוּ  -Netanyahu, Natanjahu

Jehovnatanיְהוֹנָתָן -Jonathan, Jonatan 1.Samu 14,6

3.

Ahazjahu  -  אֲחַזְיָ֗הוּ  -Ahaziah, Ahazja 1.Kralj.22:40

Jehovahazיְהוֹאָחָ֥ז -Jehoahaz, Joahaz 2.Kralj.10:35

4.

Hananjahuחֲנַנְיָ֔הוּ -Hananiah, Hananja 2.Kronika 26,11

Jehovhananיְהוֹחָנָן -John, Johanan, Ivan, Jovan... 2.Kronika 28:12

   

5.

Shepatjahuשְׁפַטְיָ֖הוּ  - Shephatiah, Šefatija 

Jehovshapat - יְהוֹשָׁפָט - Jehoshaphat, Jošafat

(follow the colors, pratiti boje )

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Ahazja 

Ahazjahu

אֲחַזְיָ֗הוּ

אחזיהו

’ă-ḥaz-yā-hū,

1.Kraljevima 22:40

https://www.hebrewoldtestament.com/B11C022.htm#V40

1.Kraljevima 22:40

Ahab je počinuo sa svojim ocima, a njegov sin Ahazja zakralji se mjesto njega.

40 וַיִּשְׁכַּב אַחְאָב עִם־אֲבֹתָיו וַיִּמְלֹךְ אֲחַזְיָהוּ בְנוֹ תַּחְתָּֽיו׃
40 .Vaijiškav ahav im-avotav vaijimloh ahazjahu venov tahtav.

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H3059

Joahaz

Jehovahaz

Jehoahaz 

yə-hō-w-’ā-ḥāz

יְהוֹאָחָ֥ז

יהואחז

2.Kraljevima 10:35

https://www.hebrewoldtestament.com/B12C010.htm#V35

2.Kraljevima 10,35

Počinuo je kraj svojih otaca i pokopaše ga u Samariji. Joahaz, sin njegov, zakralji se mjesto njega.

35 וַיִּשְׁכַּב יֵהוּא עִם־אֲבֹתָיו וַיִּקְבְּרוּ אֹתוֹ בְּשֹׁמְרוֹן וַיִּמְלֹךְ יְהוֹאָחָז בְּנוֹ תַּחְתָּֽיו׃

35 .Vaijiškav jehu im avotav, vaijikberu otov bešomerovn vaijimloh Jehovahaz benov tahtav.

2.Kraljev 10:35 תַּחְתָּֽיו  tahtav

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1.Kraljevima 22:40  Ahazjahu  אֲחַזְיָ֗הוּ

אחזיהו

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1.Kralj.22:40  אֲחַזְיָ֗הוּ  Ahazjahu (Ahazja)

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2.Kraljevima 10:35  יְהוֹאָחָ֥ז Jehovahaz

Jehoahaz 

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2.Kralj.10:35 יְהוֹאָחָ֥ז Jehovahaz  (Jehoahaz) 

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שְׁפַטְיָ֖הוּ

Shepatjahu         

Sefatija

1 Chronicles 27:16

https://www.hebrewoldtestament.com/B13C027.htm#V16

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1.Hronik 27:16 שְׁפַטְיָ֖הוּ  Shepatjahu Sefatija 

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יְהוֹשָׁפָט

Jehovshapat

Jošafat

1 Kings 4:3

https://www.hebrewoldtestament.com/B11C004.htm#V3

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1.Kralje. 4:3  יְהוֹשָׁפָט  Jehovshapat (Jošafat)

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http://abarim-publications.blogspot.com/2018/03/of-course-ancient-hebrew-had-vowels.html#.YtsbE7pBxPY

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Of course ancient Hebrew had vowels!

 

The oft repeated rumor has it that Biblical Hebrew has no vowels, and any now existing vowels were added later. This is incorrect. The great success of the Hebrew language lies precisely in the Hebrew invention of vowel notation. This invention was made around the time of king David (roughly 1000 BC, at the dawn of the Iron Age), and it gave ordinary people access to vast amounts of information. Prior to vowel notation, reading and writing was a magical affair for which one had to train in special priestly schools. Vowel notation allowed ordinary people to access vast vaults of information after a relatively simple education. Upon vowel notation, simply everybody could learn, share and add to what mankind knew, and this in turn led to the surge of human modernity that is still in full swing today.

Even in the Stone Age there was a highly sophisticated wisdom tradition — to give a hint: all domesticated crops such as potatoes, rice and corn, and animals such as sheep, dogs and pigs, were bred from feral ancestors in the Stone Age; folks from the Stone Age also invented metallurgy, music, painting, architecture, international trade, and pretty much everything (shy of the electric grid) that makes modern man modern — but a major problem was how to preserve data. When wisdom was shared orally, it only took an accident, battle or bout of some disease to knock out the village wizard (= wise-ard) and hence delete the village's data. The consonantal alphabet and later vowel notation not only turned every Tom, Dick and Harry into a sagely priest (hence a kingdom of priests — Exodus 19:6) it would also allow data to be preserved in a medium other than a fleshly brain.

The Hebrews understood that a happy life went hand in hand with knowledge of creation, and made science their form of worship (Psalm 19:1, Zechariah 8:23, John 4:23Romans 1:20). They defined the deity as the Creator, who, per definition, had to exist separate from creation. But in a brilliant feat of deductive reasoning, they also surmised that between the creation that so closely followed the Creator's character and nature, and the Creator Himself, there had to be a kind of transition that was both: where Creator and creation met and were one; that "attractor" upon which the whole chaotic universe was designed to converge and would settle in (not merely the First Mover but more so the Ultimate Destiny of everything that exists).

This bottom-line from which everything that exists derives its existence, this attractor to which everything that evolves must evolve, this intermediate between the Creator and creation, this they called "the Son" (Psalm 2:12), and "the Word" (Genesis 15:1). In later Scriptures this semi-natural phenomenon famously became personified in Jesus Christ (John 1:11 Timothy 2:5).

Keep reading:


http://www.abarim-publications.com/Meaning/Masoretes.html

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Naravno da je starohebrejski imao samoglasnike!

Često ponavljana glasina kaže da biblijski hebrejski nema samoglasnike, a svi koji sada postoje samoglasnici su dodani kasnije. Ovo je netočno. Veliki uspjeh hebrejskog jezika leži upravo u hebrejskom izumu zapisa samoglasnika. Ovaj izum nastao je otprilike u vrijeme kralja Davida (otprilike 1000. pr. Kr., u osvit željeznog doba) i omogućio je običnim ljudima pristup golemim količinama informacija. Prije zapisivanja samoglasnika, čitanje i pisanje bila je magična stvar za koju se trebalo obučavati u posebnim svećeničkim školama. Notacija samoglasnika omogućila je običnim ljudima pristup golemim trezorima informacija nakon relativno jednostavnog obrazovanja. Nakon zapisivanja samoglasnika, jednostavno je svatko mogao učiti, dijeliti i dodavati ono što je čovječanstvo znalo, a to je zauzvrat dovelo do valove ljudske modernosti koja je i danas u punom zamahu. Čak je iu kamenom dobu postojala vrlo sofisticirana mudra tradicija — da damo naslutiti: svi pripitomljeni usjevi poput krumpira, riže i kukuruza, te životinje poput ovaca, pasa i svinja, uzgojeni su od divljih predaka u kamenom dobu; ljudi iz kamenog doba također su izmislili metalurgiju, glazbu, slikarstvo, arhitekturu, međunarodnu trgovinu i skoro sve (osim električne mreže) što modernog čovjeka čini modernim - ali veliki problem bio je kako sačuvati podatke. Kad se mudrost dijelila usmeno, bila je potrebna samo nesreća, bitka ili napad neke bolesti da nokautiraju seoskog čarobnjaka (= wise-ard) i time izbrišu podatke o selu. Konsonantska abeceda i kasniji zapis samoglasnika ne samo da su pretvorili svakog Toma, Dicka i Harryja u mudrog svećenika (dakle kraljevstvo svećenika - Izlazak 19:6), već bi također omogućili da se podaci sačuvaju u mediju koji nije tjelesni mozak. Hebreji su shvatili da sretan život ide ruku pod ruku sa znanjem o stvaranju i učinili su znanost svojim oblikom obožavanja (Psalam 19:1, Zaharija 8:23, Ivan 4:23, Rimljanima 1:20). Oni su definirali božanstvo kao Stvoritelja, koji je, prema definiciji, morao postojati odvojeno od kreacije. Ali u briljantnom pothvatu deduktivnog razmišljanja, oni su također pretpostavili da između kreacije koja je tako blisko slijedila Stvoriteljev karakter i prirodu, i samog Stvoritelja, mora postojati neka vrsta prijelaza koji je bio oboje: gdje su se Stvoritelj i kreacija susreli i bili jedan; taj "atraktor" na kojemu je cijeli kaotični svemir dizajniran da konvergira i u kojem bi se smjestio (ne samo Prvi Pokretač nego još više Konačna Sudbina svega što postoji). Ova donja crta iz koje sve što postoji proizlazi iz svoje egzistencije, ovaj atraktor prema kojem se mora razviti sve što se razvija, ovaj posrednik između Stvoritelja i kreacije, ovo su nazvali "Sin" (Psalam 2:12) i "Riječ" (Postanak 15:1). U kasnijim Svetim pismima ovaj je poluprirodni fenomen slavno postao personificiran u Isusu Kristu (Ivan 1:1, 1. Timoteju 2:5).

hebrew-text-closeup_364973_resize_990__1_.jpg

It's often said that vowels were added to ancient Hebrew by the Masoretes. This is wholly incorrect.

Često se kaže da su samoglasnike u starohebrejski dodali masoreti. Ovo je potpuno netočno.

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https://www.jpost.com/jewish-world/jewish-features/the-jews-invent-vowels

Jerusalem Post

The Jews invent vowels

The Hebrews took the Phoenician consonantal system and made a seemingly minor improvement.

By JOEL M. HOFFMAN

 

Published: OCTOBER 2, 2007 07:04

IN THE BEGINNING

"Roughly 3,000 years ago, in and around the area we now call Israel, a group of people who may have called themselves ivri, and whom we call variously 'Hebrews,' 'Israelites,' or more colloquially but less accurately 'Jews,' began an experiment in writing that would change the world." That's how I began the remarkable history that links the Jewish people to its historic language and identity. (In the Beginning: A Short History of the Hebrew Language; NYU Press 2004). As Jews pause in the calendrical cycle to celebrate the Torah, it seems particularly apt to take note of the fascinating story that lies behind this experiment, without which writing would never have become widespread, and without which the world would have no Torah scrolls, books, newspapers or e-mail. The key is the vowels.

READING AND WRITING

Those of us who read and write take the technology for granted. It was an alphabetic experiment 3,000 years ago in Jerusalem that made widespread literacy possible. Before we look at what happened there, we need to understand the background. There are lots of ways to write words. Three systems that never made it predated the one that finally did. Humankind's first writing system was barely a system at all. Some 6,000 years ago, animal traders drew pictures of their animals with hash marks next to them to indicate quantity. So a tablet might represent "five sheep" with some indication of "5" next to a drawing of a sheep. This seemingly crude technique represented an enormous leap forward, because for the first time people could convey messages over a distance; before this, a merchant who wanted to tell his business partner to expect five sheep had to meet the partner face to face, or rely on a personal go-between. With this improved system, the merchant could send a remote message directly to its recipient. But his message options were severely limited. A second system greatly expanded the inventory of what could get written by introducing hundreds or thousands of "icons" and using them to create more complex messages. These icons were symbolic ways of representing a word with a picture. We still have icons. In modernity, the triangle-over-a-square that we use for "house" or "home" is such an icon. There are no houses that look like that, but we all know what it means. Similarly, even though the familiar heart shape (which we also use for "love") looks nothing like the four-chambered organ, its meaning is clear. The ancient systems of icons offered more complex messages than just "house," "heart" or "love." They even included abstract verbs and adjectives. But literacy was still limited to a professional class of readers and writers called scribes. The Sumerians, as early as the beginning of the 4th millennium BCE, created a third possible way of writing words. They recorded not the meanings of their words, but rather the sounds. The Sumerians devised a few hundred symbols, one for each syllable of their language, and used combinations of these symbols to represent words. This syllabic system was better than the iconic one, both because it was more flexible and because it involved fewer symbols. But literacy was still beyond the reach of the common person. Until the Hebrews, society's progress depended on scribes, for they were the only ones who could read and write. Indeed, a 4,000-year-old Egyptian document shows us the degree to which society valued these mediators of language. "There is no greater calling," it reads, "than to be a scribe." Of course, it was a scribe who wrote that, so we don't know for sure what the rest of society thought. With hindsight, though, we know the scribe was right. But precisely because only scribes could master these three systems - pictures, icons, and syllabic writing - each would eventually give way to a fourth: the alphabet.

THE CONSONANTS

Sometime during the second millennium BCE, a language commonly called "proto-Canaanite" - that is, "the language that would become Canaanite" - began to be written entirely in consonants. Later, the Phoenicians of southern Lebanon would write similarly. This purely consonantal system cleverly needed only about two-dozen symbols in various combinations to record any word in the language. For example, the common ancient Canaanite word ram, meaning "high/exalted," would be written RM. The word for "god," el, was spelled ?L. (The question mark represents an alef, probably sounding like the glottal stop you hear between the "uh" and the "oh" of the modern "uh-oh.") The plural, gods, (elim) was written ?LM. Anyone could learn the system. Anyone could learn to write. The problem, however, was that without any vowels, many people couldn't read what they had written. The word RM could be read as ram, but also as rama ("height") or even roma ("Rome" - though Rome wouldn't come to be for centuries). So the consonantal system was a huge improvement, but was hard to read because some combinations of letters could be read in too many ways.

THE VOWELS

Around the time of King David (roughly 1000 BCE), the Hebrews took the Phoenician consonantal system and made a seemingly minor improvement. They used the letter H (which we call a heh) not only as a consonant, but also to represent the vowel A. They used the letter Y (yud) to represent the vowels I and E, and W (now called vav, though back then it probably had a W-sound, not a V-sound) for the vowels O and U. By using letters for both consonants and vowels, the Hebrews created the alphabet. (We should be careful not to confuse these vowel-letters with the "Hebrew vowels" - the dots and dashes in and around letters that have been used for only the past 1,100 years or so.) In ancient Jerusalem, the vowel-letters were generally optional. (American President Andrew Jackson, who opined that, "it's a damn poor mind that can only think of one way to spell a word," would have been proud.) The word for "high" (ram) was still written RM, but if the Hebrews wanted to make it clear that they had the word rama in mind, they could append a heh in its newly invented role as vowel: RMH. And for roma, they could add a vav, too: RWMH. The system still wasn't perfect, but it was enough. Now, for the first time ever, the average person could learn to read and write. It seems that the average person was even expected to become literate. After all, we read in Deuteronomy (quoted daily in Jewish liturgy and to this day affixed in the entranceways to Jewish homes): "Write them on the doorposts of your house, and upon your gates." This presupposes the ability to write and, it would seem, to read.

SPREADING LIKE WILDFIRE The Hebrew alphabet - ALEPH, BET, etc... - became a world-wide success. It provided the foundation for the Greek alphabet (ALPHA, BETA....) and Latin too: (A, B...). The Greek alphabet is used to this day in Greece. A variation of it called Cyrillic is used in Eastern Europe for Russian, Serbian, and so forth. Other Eastern European languages, along with the major languages of Western Europe and of the Americas, are written in minor variations of the Latin alphabet. Arabic writing is based on Hebrew, as is the writing of India. And the original Hebrew alphabet from 3,000 years ago, though in a different script ("font"), is used to this day in Israel. Every time the Jerusalem Post is printed, or a prayerbook read, or the Torah chanted, we see the power of the ancient Hebrew system. More than that, almost all the alphabetic writing in the world today - whether in Jerusalem, New York, Moscow, London, Riyadh, Buenos Aires or Mumbai - is the result of the 3,000-year-old Hebrew experiment. (The Korean alphabet is a notable exception; a Korean king woke up one day in the 15th century and invented it. We also have non-alphabetic writing such as Chinese.) The Hebrews gave the world not only writing, but also the world's all-time best-selling book: the Bible. There is hardly a place on earth that has not been touched by it. But there would have been no way to spread and preserve the Bible without writing it down for the masses. And without the vowel letters, the masses would never have been able to read it. (We might contrast the ancient Phoenicians in this regard. While most of us learn about them, few have read any of their books.) In retrospect, we easily recognize the monumental influence of the alphabet, and the vowel letters that made it possible. But we are not the first generation to do so. The inhabitants of Jerusalem themselves seem to have appreciated the incredible power of their newly reinvigorated heh, yud, and vav. THE MAGIC VOWEL LETTERS Genesis 17 tells of a covenant between God and a man, Abram, whose name is spelled ?BRM. (Again, the question mark represents an alef, used for a glottal stop.) The ancient word ?B means "father," and, as we saw, RM means "exalted." ?BRM was the "exalted father," or "tribal elder." When ?BRM enters into a covenant with his God, he gets a heh inserted in the middle of his name: ?BRM becomes ?BRHM. That is, Abram becomes Abraham. Regardless of the historical accuracy or divinity of the story - and here, obviously, well-meaning people disagree - it is clear to all that it is the special heh, one of three letters that completed the alphabet, that gets added to ?BRM to create ?BRHM. His wife, too, gets a heh added to her name: Sarai becomes Sarah. The Hebrews didn't stop there. As we saw above, the ancient Canaanite word for "god" was el, spelled ?L, and the word for "gods," therefore, was elim, spelled in Phoenician ?LM and in Hebrew ?LYM. The Hebrews took this common Canaanite word and added a heh right in the middle to create one of God's names: ?LHYM. In short, the patriarch, matriarch, and deity of the Hebrews all get their names by adding a heh to convert otherwise common words into special ones. The Hebrews used their vowel-letters not just to make writing possible, but to create their most important names. In addition to ?LHYM, we find a second, four-letter name for God, the tetragrammaton (which means "four-letters" in Greek). The four letters are yud, heh, vav, heh. Common pronunciations such as "Yahweh" or "Jehovah" miss the point. What really matters here is the remarkable fact that this name consists entirely of the Hebrews' newly invented vowel letters, each included once, with the particularly special heh repeated. The tetragrammaton is unique in ancient Hebrew, in that its pronunciation seems divorced from its spelling. It also seems to lack any plausible etymology, and is unattested in similar ancient languages. Now we know why. The Hebrews paid homage to the vowel letters that made it possible to spread the Word of God by using those letters to refer to God. IN SUM, the Hebrews modified the Phoenicians' system by using three letters both as consonants and as vowels. They thus gave the world the alphabet. Then they used one of their vowels to create the names of their progenitors and their God. They used a combination of all three letters to create what would become the most important way of writing God's name. The season to celebrate the Torah approaches. As Jews across the world use an ancient invention to revel in an ancient message, it seems fitting to acknowledge the gift that the ancient Hebrews bestowed on civilization. If you read the Torah, or even if you just read this essay, thank an ancient vowel. Dr. Joel M. Hoffman teaches at HUC-JIR in New York, and serves as Resident Scholar at Shaaray Tefila in Bedford Corners, NY. Suggestions for further reading, and more information about his work, can be found on his website: www.Lashon.net

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SAMOGLASNICI

Otprilike u vrijeme kralja Davida (otprilike 1000. g. pr. n. e.), Hebreji su preuzeli feničanski sustav suglasnika i napravili naizgled neznatno poboljšanje. Koristili su slovo H (koje zovemo heh) ne samo kao suglasnik, već i za predstavljanje samoglasnika A. Koristili su slovo Y (yud) za predstavljanje samoglasnika I i E, i W (sada se zove vav, iako tada je vjerojatno imao W-glas, a ne V-glas) za samoglasnike O i U. Upotrebom slova i za suglasnike i za samoglasnike, Hebreji su stvorili abecedu. (Trebali bismo paziti da ne pomiješamo ova samoglasnička slova s ​​"hebrejskim samoglasnicima" - točkama i crticama unutar i oko slova koja su se koristila tek zadnjih 1100 godina ili tako nešto.) U drevnom Jeruzalemu, samoglasnička slova bila su općenito izborno. (Američki predsjednik Andrew Jackson, koji je smatrao da je "prokleto jadan um koji može smisliti samo jedan način sricanja riječi", bio bi ponosan.) Riječ za "visok" (ovan) i dalje je bila napisana RM, ali ako su Hebreji htjeli razjasniti da imaju na umu riječ rama, mogli su dodati heh u novoizmišljenoj ulozi samoglasnika: RMH. A za Rome bi mogli dodati i vav: RWMH. Sustav još uvijek nije bio savršen, ali je bio dovoljan. Sada, po prvi put ikada, prosječna osoba može naučiti čitati i pisati. Čini se da se od prosječne osobe čak i očekivalo da postane pismena. Uostalom, čitamo u Ponovljenom zakonu (koja se svakodnevno citira u židovskoj liturgiji i do danas stoji na ulazu u židovske domove): "Napiši ih na dovratnike svoje kuće i na svoja vrata." To pretpostavlja sposobnost pisanja i, čini se, čitanja.

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