Old Testament Linguistic Studies
This section is dedicated to academic research focused on the Hebrew and Aramaic languages of the Old Testament, with particular emphasis on Biblical linguistics, philology, grammar, syntax, morphology, phonetics, lexical-semantic analysis, and exegetical studies of the biblical text.
The page features scholarly studies dealing with the linguistic and philological structure of Old Testament Hebrew and Aramaic, including analyses of verbal systems, grammatical forms, sentence structures, lexical usage, semantic development, translation issues, and the interpretation of key linguistic phenomena within the Hebrew Bible.
Special attention is devoted to research in:
- Biblical Hebrew linguistics;
- Old Testament Aramaic;
- grammatical and syntactic analysis;
- verbal morphology;
- phonetics and phonology;
- lexical-semantic studies;
- textual and linguistic exegesis;
- comparative linguistic observations relevant to the biblical text;
- and broader philological investigations concerning the language of the Old Testament.
Scholarly articles and research papers will be published successively at the bottom of this page as part of the ongoing academic work of the Institute for Hebrew Language and Literature.
