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Copyright

Ethan Jones;

Published On

2025-03-07

Page Range

pp. 331–358

Language

  • English

Print Length

28 pages

A More Polite Suggestion: The Lengthened Imperative in Biblical Hebrew

  • Ethan Jones (author)
The article explores the function of the lengthened imperative form in Biblical Hebrew, proposing that its primary role is to mark politeness rather than being redundant or purely stylistic. While earlier scholarship often dismissed it as tautological, this study integrates insights from linguistic politeness theory, including positive and negative politeness strategies. Examples from biblical texts, particularly the Psalms, demonstrate how the lengthened imperative is employed to mitigate face-threatening acts, express deference, or create a sense of urgency. The form is also linked to relational and rhetorical strategies, highlighting the dynamics of speaker-addressee interactions. The study acknowledges the overlap with other interpretations, such as directionality or euphony, and suggests that politeness offers a unifying explanation for the form’s diverse usage contexts.

Contributors

Ethan Jones

(author)
Associate Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary

Ethan Jones (PhD, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary) is Associate Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. He has written widely on the intersection of linguistics, philology, and biblical interpretation. Selected recent publications: Psalms in an Age of Distraction: Experiencing the Restorative Power of Biblical Poetry (Baker Academic, 2024) and ‘What is Elijah Doing?: On וַיִּתְמֹדֵד in 1 Kgs 17,21 (Again)’, Revue Biblique 131/3 (2024).