Difference between revisions of "Page:APUG 0385-B.pdf/5"

From GATE
Page body (to be transcluded):Page body (to be transcluded):
Line 1: Line 1:
 
<center>In cap. 1. gen.</center>
 
<center>In cap. 1. gen.</center>
 
{{Left sidenote|בְּרֵאשִׁית}}illud בְּ servilis litera est si<lb/>
 
{{Left sidenote|בְּרֵאשִׁית}}illud בְּ servilis litera est si<lb/>
gnificans in, cum, propter, de, etc <ref>While teaching the Old Testament at the Jesuit school in Louvain Bellarmine was preparing his own Hebrew grammar, largely based upon Jean Cinqarbres's grammar ''Institvtiones In Lingvam Hebraicam, Sive Epitome Operis De Re Grammatica Hebræorum candidatis fœliciter Hebraïcari cupientibus apprimè vtilis & necessaria,'' Per Ioannem Quinquarboreum, (Paris, 1559). For the explanation of the servilis litera see ''Institutiones linguae hebraicae ex optimo quoque auctore collectae; et ad quantam maximam fieri potuit brevitatem, perspicuitatem, atque ordinem revocatae,  ''a Roberto Bellarmino S.J. (Rome, 1578), p. Roberto Bellarmino (Antwerp, 1596), p. 126. </ref> et fre<lb/>
+
gnificans in, cum, propter, de, etc <ref>While teaching the Old Testament at the Jesuit school in Louvain Bellarmine was preparing his own Hebrew grammar, largely based upon Jean Cinqarbres's grammar ''Institvtiones In Lingvam Hebraicam, Sive Epitome Operis De Re Grammatica Hebræorum candidatis fœliciter Hebraïcari cupientibus apprimè vtilis & necessaria,'' Per Ioannem Quinquarboreum, (Paris, 1559). For the explanation of the servilis litera see ''Institutiones linguae hebraicae ex optimo quoque auctore collectae; et ad quantam maximam fieri potuit brevitatem, perspicuitatem, atque ordinem revocatae,  ''a Roberto Bellarmino S.J. (Rome, 1578), p. 126. </ref> et fre<lb/>
 
quenter servit ablativo instrumenti, vel pre<lb/>
 
quenter servit ablativo instrumenti, vel pre<lb/>
 
tii. hinc sunt hebraismi, arare<lb/>
 
tii. hinc sunt hebraismi, arare<lb/>

Revision as of 20:04, 15 November 2022

This page has not been proofread


In cap. 1. gen.

בְּרֵאשִׁית illud בְּ servilis litera est si
gnificans in, cum, propter, de, etc [1] et fre
quenter servit ablativo instrumenti, vel pre
tii. hinc sunt hebraismi, arare
in vitula[2], in baculo transire jordanem[3]
in Deo transgredi murum[4],
et apostoli Pauli, loqui in lingua[5],
et redemisti nos in sanguine tuo[6].
sepe etiam redundat. idem est enim
בָּרִישֹׁאנַהבָּרִישֹׁאנָה et רִישֹׁאנָה
et R. Abraham [7] hoc loco putat redundare.[8] porro punctum eius ordinarium est
sceva, quod tamen interdum mutatur,
ut suo loco dicemus. Illud
autem רֵשֵׁאשׁיִת est nomen heemanticum [9] et
fit a radice רֹאשׁ
id est caput. inde enim quod proprie
significat caput et deinde desi
natur ad significandos principes quia
sunt capita populorum; et principium,
quia est caput rei, vel temporis vel
actionis, etc. Est autem quaestio an
illud רֵאשִׁת sit in regimine,
an in statu absoluto. multi


---page break---

  1. While teaching the Old Testament at the Jesuit school in Louvain Bellarmine was preparing his own Hebrew grammar, largely based upon Jean Cinqarbres's grammar Institvtiones In Lingvam Hebraicam, Sive Epitome Operis De Re Grammatica Hebræorum candidatis fœliciter Hebraïcari cupientibus apprimè vtilis & necessaria, Per Ioannem Quinquarboreum, (Paris, 1559). For the explanation of the servilis litera see Institutiones linguae hebraicae ex optimo quoque auctore collectae; et ad quantam maximam fieri potuit brevitatem, perspicuitatem, atque ordinem revocatae, a Roberto Bellarmino S.J. (Rome, 1578), p. 126.
  2. Jud. 14,18
  3. Gen. 32,10
  4. 2 Sam. 22,30
  5. 1 Cor. 14,2
  6. Apoc. 5,9
  7. Abraham ibn Ezra was a distinguished medieval Jewish exegete and philosopher
  8. IN THE BEGINNING. Our sages said that [the letter] bet is superfluous as in bet ba-rishonah [Gen. 13,4]), for it is also found as rishonah [Num. 2,9], Arbaʿ ṿe-ʿeśrim ... : ha-ḥumash ʿim targum u-ferush Rashi ṿe-Ibn Ezra u-farperaʼot mi-baʿal ha-Ṭurim : ṿeha-Neviʼim ha-rishonim ʿim perush Rashi ṿe-Ḳimḥi ṿe-Ralbag ṿe-Rabi Yeshaʿyah : u-Neviʼim ha-aḥaronim ʿim p.[erush] Rashi ṿe-Ḳimḥi : ṿeha-Ketuvim ... ṿeha-Miḳraʼot meturgamim (Venice, 1547-48), a.l.
  9. the 7 consonants (ה א ם ן ת י ו ) to be taken off when establishing the root of a hebrew word, see Cinqarbres, Institvtiones In Lingvam Hebraicam, pp. 87-93,