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

This workbook offers 65 lessons to learn and practice patterns and principles of Hebrew grammar. Includes concise explanations, plenty of exercises, and useful charts. The included lessons provide a helpful study tool to enhance student learning.

Older grammarians believed that the unaccented ָח at the end of a word represented the survival of the original accusative case ending -a, however Ugaritic (an earlier semitic language) indicates the survival of both an accusative ending (-a) and an adverbial suffix (-h) like the Hebrew so-called “he-locale” or “he-directive.” Thus it is possible that there may be a few examples of the remainder of the old accusative case on some words (e.g., לָ֣יְלָה “night,” אַ֣רְצָה “land”),