THE HEBREW PARTICLES A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ARTS Published March 1915 Composed and Printed By 62 1915 CONTENTS 5. The Views of Boettcher and Wright. 6. Theory of the Substantive Origin of N. 9-10. Criticism of Ewald's View. 11-14. Criticism of Boettcher's View. 15-18. Criticism of Sperling's View. c) THE SUBSTANTIVE ORIGIN OF N 19-24. Traces of Substantive Origin in the Adverbial Use of N. 25-32. The Adverbial Use of N without Analogy in the Demon- stratives of Other Semitic Dialects. 33-39. The Close Analogy between and the Assyrian a šar. a) CRITICISM OF BAUMANN'S THEORY 46-50. Baumann's Theory of the Syntax of N. 51-53. Baumann's Theory Involves the Assumption That Two Successive Demonstratives May Belong to the Same Ante- 54. A Point of Difference between the Relative Use of and .אשר and ,זף 55-57. Comparison with Other Semitic Dialects. 58-61. Following Demonstratives Used Alone. 396176 PAGE 62. 1. Substantive Relative Clauses as Subject Syntactic Position of according to Boettcher-Baumann 63-65. Objections against This View. 66. 2. Substantive Relative Clauses as Object Examples Illustrating Baumann's Theory. 67-68. Objections against the Theory. Importance Attached to 69. 3. .אשר Preceding את Object Relative Clauses without . Substantive Relative Clauses Depending on a Preposition c) A VAGUE Medium of RELATION. 74-76. Used as a Connective Indicating Neither a Relative Nor a d) IN CLAUSES OF SPECIFICATION 83-86.-Clauses the Equivalent of an Accustive of Specification. 50 92. Continues an Idea Begun by a Participle. f) THE RETROSPECTIVE COMPLEMENT . 93-96. Weakness of Baumann's View Regarding the Syntactic 97. Importance of the 'Aid. View of König as to the Origin of the 'Aid. 98-100. Erroneous Statements of Gesenius-Kautzsch Grammar with Reference to the Suppression of the 'Aîd. PART II. THE CONJUNCTIONAL USE OF UN AND ITS PAGE 148-54. Equivalent to "According to That Which," the UN Retaining Its Force as a Relative Particle. 155-57. Equivalent to "According to the Fact or Circumstance That," the Revealing Its Conjunctional Force. Introducing an Assumed Comparison. 158. 71 105 |