Tiberian vocalization
Encyclopedia
|
| Tutorials | Encyclopedia | Dictionary | Directory |
|
Tiberian vocalization
Tiberian Hebrew is an extinct (yet very well documented) oral tradition of pronunciation for ancient Hebrew, especially the Hebrew of the Tanakh, that was given written form by masoretic scholars in the Jewish community at Tiberias, Israel, in the early Middle Ages, beginning in the 8th century. This written form employed symbols, called nequdot (for vowels) and cantillation signs, added to the Hebrew letters. Though the written symbols came into use in the early Middle Ages, the oral tradition they reflect is apparently much older, with ancient roots. The Tiberian system of vocalization for the Tanakh represented its own local tradition. Two other local traditions that created written systems during the same period are referred to geographically as the vocalization of the "Land of Israel" (not identical to Tiberias; perhaps the South of the country) and the Babylonian vocalization. The former tradition has evolved to the contemporary Hebrew pronunciation (via its successor, Sephardi Hebrew) in Israel, although its graphic system was abandoned. The Babylonian system was dominant in some areas for many centuries, and the vocalization, though not the graphic system, may survive to this day in the form of Yemenite Hebrew. Unlike the Tiberian system, which mostly places vowel points under the Hebrew letters, the system of the "Land of Israel" and the Babylonian system mostly place them above the letters, and are thus termed "supralinear" vocalization. As mentioned above, the Tiberian points were designed to reflect a specific oral tradition for reading the Tanakh. Later they were applied to other texts (one of the earliest being the Mishnah), and used widely by Jews in other places with different oral traditions for how to read Hebrew. Thus the Tiberian vowel points and cantillation signs became a common part of Hebrew writing.
SourcesThe usual Hebrew Grammar Books do not teach Tiberian Hebrew as described by the early grammarians. As a matter of fact, the prevalent view in some of these grammars is the use of David Qimchi's system of division of the graphic signs into "short" and "long" vowels. The values assigned to the Tiberian vowel signs reveals a Sephardi tradition of pronunciation (the dual quality of qames (??) as , ; the pronunciation of simple schwa (??) as ). The phonology of Tiberian Hebrew can be gleaned by the collation of various sources:
ConsonantsTiberian Hebrew has 22 consonantal phonemes represented by 22 letters. The Shin with dot on the left (??) was pronounced the same as the letter Samekh. The letters ?????"? had each two allophones - plosive and fricative.
The most salient characteristics of the Tiberian Hebrew consonantal pronunciation are:
a) "Normal" Resh pronounced thus (according to Eldar, as a uvular sound ) in all other instances (except for the circumstances described below). Example: ???? b) The "peculiar" resh before or after Lamed or Nun, any of the three being vocalized with simple schwa; and Resh after Zayin, Daleth, Sin / Samekh, Taw, Tzadi, Teth, any of them punctuated with simple schwa. Example: ?????????? , ??????? . Given the proximity of a dental consonant, it is likely that this form of resh was pronounced as an alveolar trill, like resh in Sephardi Hebrew. c) There is still another pronunciation, affected by the addition of a dagesh in the Resh in certain words in the Bible, which indicates it was doubled . Example: ??????????? As can be seen, this pronunciation has to do with the progressive increase in length of this consonant. It was preserved only by the population of Ma'azya which is in Tiberias.
VowelsFull vowels Tiberian Hebrew distinguishes seven vocalic qualities, regardless of length: ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ??. The symbols are phonetically logical, in that the extension of a sign downward indicates the flattening or retraction of a vowel sound, while its extension to the left indicates broadening. "Chateph" vowels There are four special signs to denote ultrashort vowels, whose phonemic value is ?? ?? ??. Simple shwa (??) when mobile was originally pronounced as and thus, was identical to chateph pathach. Mobile Shwa = Shwa na' The simple shwa sign changes its pronunciation depending on its position in the word (mobile/vocal or quiescent/zero), as well as due to its proximity to certain consonants. In the examples given below, it has been preferred to show one found precisely in the Bible which represents each phenomenon in a graphic manner (e.g. a chateph vowel), although these rules still apply when there is only simple schwa (depending on the manuscript or edition used). When the simple shwa appears in any of the following positions, it is regarded as mobile:
The gutturals (???"?), and yodh (?), affect the pronunciation of the shwa preceding them. It follows these two rules:
It must be said that, even though there are no special signs apart to denote the full range of furtive vowels, these remaining four () are represented by simple schwa (Chateph chireq (???) in the Aleppo Codex is a scribal oddity, and certainly not regular in Hebrew manuscripts with Tiberian vocalization). Quiescent Shwa = Shwa nakh All other cases should be treated as zero vowel (quiescent), including the double final shwa (double initial schwa does not exist in this Hebrew dialect), and the shewa in the word ????????? ("two", feminine), read by the Tiberian Masoretes as ??????????? . This last case has similitudes with phenomena occurring in the Samaritan Pronunciation and the Phoenician language. Syllable structure
(The terms "short" and "long" refer to vowel length, or duration, not to the artificial division of the graphic signs into these two categories.) Hebrew Bible editions todaySome time after the close of the Masoretic Era, many of these old features were corrected in manuscripts, or never even marked graphically, and eventually forgotten, since no Jewish community continued the Tiberian tradition to the last detail (to tell the truth, each community had its own tradition of pronunciation and assigned its phonetic values to the Tiberian signs). This is even more noticeable in our days, where new editions of the Hebrew Bible (except for those based on reliable, ancient manuscripts as diplomatic texts) have changed all of these features of ancient orthography and vocalization for the sake of spelling consistency and to adhere to Jewish Law. Since those days, Israeli Hebrew and traditions such as the Sephardi and Ashkenazic pronounce shwa na' in a uniform fashion, as // or //, or omit it altogether. Bibliography
Endnotes
Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
top
©2008-2009 TutorGig.com. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement