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Colour Terms in the Old Testament is unavailable, but you can change that!

Athalya Brenner presents her studies on the role of color in Old Testament texts. Realizing that words themselves are only part of the overall context of Scripture, Brenner examines the literary and semantic significance of color in Hebrew texts. She also writes about development in culture, language, and vocabulary. Brenner looks at the mental associations we have with color and shades, and how...

e) The doubtful forms should have the same distributional potential as previously established basic terms. In English, the fact that the suffix ‘-ish’ can be added to ‘red’, ‘white’, ‘green’, ‘blue’, defines the whole series as a ‘basic’ one. Applied to Hebrew, this would mean that *שחרחֹר, אדמדַּם, and even ירקרָק point back to primary forms that underline them—אָדֹם, שָחֹר, יָרוֹק The criterion may be especially helpful for establishing the status of יָרוֹק (Job 39:8) which—as it stands—is a hapax
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