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Amos: A Handbook on the Hebrew Text is unavailable, but you can change that!

In Amos Duane Garrett puts aside the study of contextual, theological matters normally touched upon in commentaries, and solely focuses on the written text. He brings a carefully learned grammatical analysis to this study and illustrates the meaning of the text through grammar study.

Although one might debate whether qatal and weqatal should be considered to be separate conjugations, in the syntax of the language, each of the five forms listed above has a distinctive set of functions. Therefore, one cannot treat the qatal and the weqatal simply as the same verbal form; the former is generally perfective in aspect and indicative in mood, and it typically deals with past, present, or gnomic actions. The latter is generally imperfective and may be subjunctive or volitive, and it
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