Book Series
- Semitic Languages and Cultures vol. 20
- ISSN Print: 2632-6906
- ISSN Digital: 2632-6914
Copyright
William A. Ross; Elizabeth Robar;Published On
2023-09-25ISBN
Language
- English
Print Length
374 pages (xxii+352)Dimensions
Weight
Media
OCLC Number
1401575995LCCN
2022361356THEMA
- CF
- CFF
- QRMF1
- 2CSJ
BIC
- CF
- CFF
- HRCG
- 2CS
BISAC
- LAN009000
- LAN009010
- BIB000000
LCC
- P125
Keywords
- Biblical Text
- Cognitive Linguistics
- Functional Grammar
- Generative linguistics
- Ancient Hebrew
- Computational Linguistics
Linguistic Theory and the Biblical Text
- William A. Ross (editor)
- Elizabeth Robar (editor)
Contents
- Jacobus A. Naudé
- Cynthia L. Miller-Naudé
Functional Grammar and the Pragmatics of Information Structure for Biblical Languages
(pp. 67–116)- Randall Buth
Cognitive Linguistic Theory and the Biblical Languages
(pp. 117–171)- William A. Ross
Historical Linguistics and the Biblical Languages
(pp. 172–222)- Kaspars Ozoliņš
Computational Linguistic Analysis of the Biblical Text
(pp. 223–272)- Willem Th. van Peursen
Emerging from Silos of Analysis: A Complexity Theory Approach to the Study of Biblical Texts
(pp. 273–323)- Sophia L. Pitcher
Introduction
(pp. 1–5)- Elizabeth Robar
Contributors
William A. Ross
(editor)William A. Ross (PhD, University of Cambridge, 2018) is associate professor of Old Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, North Carolina. His publications include Postclassical Greek Prepositions and Conceptual Metaphor (edited with Steven E. Runge; De Gruyter, 2022) and Postclassical Greek and Septuagint Lexicography (SBL Press, 2022). His research focuses on the Septuagint, linguistics and lexicography, and the history of biblical philology.
Elizabeth Robar
(editor)Elizabeth Robar (PhD, University of Cambridge, 2013) is author of The Verb and the Paragraph: A Cognitive Linguistic Approach (Brill, 2014), an adaptation of her doctoral dissertation. She founded Cambridge Digital Bible Research, a charity to make biblical scholarship available, accessible, and useful to interpreters of the Bible. Her research is philological, linguistic, and exegetical in nature, focusing on the Biblical Hebrew verbal system, syntax, linguistic change, and the ramifications of research in these areas for exegetical interpretation.