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Copyright

Simon Hopkins;

Published On

2025-03-07

Page Range

pp. 577–610

Language

  • English

Print Length

34 pages

On the Pronunciation of Sacred Names

  • Simon Hopkins (author)
The study explores the reverence surrounding sacred names across cultures, focusing on linguistic strategies to avoid explicit mention of the divine. These strategies include substituting divine names with circumlocutions, altering pronunciation or orthography, and employing archaic forms to maintain a respectful distance. The discussion delves into the Jewish tradition’s avoidance of the Tetragrammaton, using alternatives like ʾadonay in prayer and ha-šem in speech, and highlights the sacred qamets vowel in biblical and post-biblical contexts. The use of emphatic phonology, such as velarised consonants and backed vowels, distinguishes sacred names in languages like Arabic, Hebrew, and Neo-Aramaic. The article connects these phonological markers to broader phenomena of sound symbolism and cultural reverence, drawing parallels between sacred and secular linguistic practices.

Contributors

Simon Hopkins

(author)
Emeritus Professor in the Department of Arabic Language and Literature at Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Simon Hopkins (PhD, University of London) is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Arabic Language and Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is interested in Semitic philology in general, especially Arabic and Aramaic in their various ancient, mediaeval and modern forms. He has paid particular attention to the oldest records of Muslim literary Arabic as attested in the papyri of the first centuries of Islam. From the mediaeval period, he has worked on Judaeo-Arabic, in particular the earliest extant Judaeo-Arabic texts from the first millennium (written in phonetic orthography) and the somewhat later writings of Maimonides (d. 1204), some of whose autographs he has published. In the field of Aramaic, he has studied various modern Neo-Aramaic dialects still spoken in Israel. The living speech collected viva voce from the speakers themselves revealed a previously unknown dialect group which shows a systematic transitive: intransitive split in the inflection of the preterite verb. Besides the Semitic languages themselves, Simon Hopkins is interested in the history of Semitic studies and the biographies of orientalists. He has also written on the Arabic, Jewish and oriental interests of the Victorian author George Borrow (d. 1881).