T. H. Robinson's Paradigms and exercises in Syriac Grammar was first published in 1915 to meet the need for 'something of an elementary nature which should be of value to the student who takes up Syriac for the first time'. Since then, the book has met this need for generations of students. The fifth edition of 2002 remains the grammar of choice for many teachers of Syriac classes as well as for students learning by themselves. The present revision, drawing on ten more years of university teaching experience and students' comments, clarifies some of the grammatical explanations and exercises. Improvements to the fonts and a larger format make for easier reading. As before, the West Syriac script and grammatical tradition are followed in the body of the lessons, and appendices introduce reading in the other (estrangela and Eastern) scripts. The book remains a plain and friendly introduction to this important language.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
a touchstone for all English-speaking learners of Syriac during the past century ... To Coakley's great credit, he continues to find ways to improve the book for a new generation of students without drastically changing its tried and tested format ... run, do not walk, to buy Coakley's sixth edition ... [it] is a venerable and compelling textbook and should have a place in every university library as well as on the shelf of every Syriacist. * Scott Fitzgerald Johnson, Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies *
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Students and scholars of Syriac; of Syriac Early Christian Texts; of the Syriac Orthodox Church.
Editions-Typ
Maße
Höhe: 217 mm
Breite: 141 mm
Dicke: 12 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-19-968717-6 (9780199687176)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Prior to his retirement in 2006, J. F. Coakley was an affiliated lecturer at Cambridge University, where he taught Syriac in the Faculty of Divinity. He was previously Senior Lecturer at Lancaster University and at Harvard University. His research interests include various areas of Syriac studies including biblical exegesis, modern church history, and Syriac letter-forms in manuscript and print.
Autor*in
Formerly affiliated lecturer in SyriacFormerly affiliated lecturer in Syriac, University of Cambridge
1. Introduction ; 2. The script ; 3. Pronunciation ; 4. Pronouns. Particles. Simple sentences ; 5. Nouns and adjectives: gender, number, state ; 6. Pronominal suffixes ; 7. Prepositions ; 8. Verbs. The perfect tense ; 9. Nouns and adjectives with variable vowels ; 10. Participles ; 11. More nouns with variable vowels ; 12. Miscellaneous and irregular nouns ; 13. The imperfect tense ; 14. The imperative and infinitive. ; 15. The ethpe'el ; 16. The pa'el and ethpa'al ; 17. The aph'el and ettaph'al. Other conjugations ; 18. Objective pronominal suffixes, 1: attached to the perfect ; 19. Objective pronominal suffixes, 2: attached to other forms of the verb ; 20. Weak verbs. Pe-nun verbs ; 21. Pe-alaph verbs ; 22. Pe-yod verbs ; 23. 'E-alaph verbs ; 24. Hollow verbs ; 25. Geminate verbs ; 26. Lamad-yod verbs, 1: the pe'al ; 27. Lamad-yod verbs, 2: other conjugations ; 28. Pronominal suffixes attached to lamad-yod verbs ; 29. Numbers ; Appendices ; A. A. Pronunciation of the bgdkpt letters ; B. B. The estrangela script. Diacritical points ; C. C. East Syriac writing and phonology ; D. D. Dates ; Syriac-English glossary ; English-Syriac glossary