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A Grammar of Biblical Hebrew is unavailable, but you can change that!

It is the standard required text in many intermediate-advanced Hebrew courses and is an excellent reference for learning Hebrew on your own! Joüon-Muraoka's grammar was originally written in French in 1923 but has been recently translated and updated to reflect modern advances in the field. It is frequently cited by lexicons, commentaries and Bible dictionaries (e.g., HALOT, WBC, Anchor). It...

names in hieroglyphic Egyptian(4). Outside the biblical texts, Old Hebrew is represented by a considerable body of epigraphical materials such as the famous Gezer agricultural calendar (10th cent.), Samaria ostraca (early 8th cent.), the Siloam inscription (ca. 700), over one hundred ostraca from Arad in the Negev (mostly from the end of the 6th cent. B.C.), and 22 Lachish ostraca (from about the same period as the Arad ostraca). The inscription of Mesha, King of Moab (cf. 2Kg 3. 4) (ca. 850),
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