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Basics Of Biblical Hebrew Workbook (2nd Edition) [Paperback]
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$ 19.49
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$ 24.99 |
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$ 5.50 (22%) |
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Item Number |
37263 |
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OverviewThe Basics of Biblical Hebrew Workbook has just gotten better. In order to keep students from becoming discouraged, especially in the beginning stages, the authors have decided to give more vocabulary aid, so students do not have to spend all their time trying to look up words in a dictionary. Many of the minor changes in this workbook have come as a result of professor and student feedback. Publishers Description The Basics of Biblical Hebrew Workbook has just gotten better. In order to keep students from becoming discouraged, especially in the beginning stages, the authors have decided to give more vocabulary aid, so students do not have to spend all their time trying to look up words in a dictionary. Many of the minor changes in this workbook have come as a result of professor and student feedback.
Pages 304
Est. Packaging Dimensions: Length: 10.94" Width: 8.44" Height: 0.77" Weight: 1.95 lbs.
Binding Softcover
Release Date Jul 24, 2024
Publisher Zondervan Publishing
Age 18
ISBN 0310270227 EAN 9780310270225 UPC 025986270223
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Availability 83 units. Availability accurate as of Sep 09, 2024 08:05.
Usually ships within one to two business days from La Vergne, TN.
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Reviews - What do our customers think?
| I don't like the workbook or the grammer book Sep 21, 2009 |
In my opinion neither one is designed for anyone just beginning to learn Hebrew. | | | The most complete and satisfying Hebrew Workbook Nov 30, 1999 |
This workbook is issued in conjunction with the BASICS OF BIBLICAL HEBREW Grammar (ISBN 031023760). Please see my review of that book IN LOCO. Two points need to be kept in mind about this workbook. First, it does not contain an answer key. (The key exists only in electronic format and can be found on the CD Rom that comes with the Grammar.) Second, the workbook cannot be used on its own, but depends upon the Grammar. | | | Total Immersion Nov 30, 1999 |
I have not reviewed other first year Biblical Hebrew workbooks but I can compare this experience with my previous study of four other languages. This workbook is closely coordinated with the textbook by Pratico and Van Pelt and meant to be used in the same sequence as the material covered in the textbook. I found the exercises to be very carefully designed so as not to discourage the beginning Hebrew student; this is a common besetting problem because the morphology, grammar, and syntax differs so much more from English than Biblical Greek or other Indo-European languages. From the first exercise on, the author has been very careful to cull examples for parsing of nouns, pronominal suffixes, prepositions/prefixes, construct forms, and (especially) the verbal system that build gradually enough for most students to stay afloat, given a pace of learning that aims to complete the textbook in a 2-semester time frame. Perhaps the most encouraging aspect of the design is inclusion of real snippets for translation of the biblical text from the earliest exercises on. I found myself actually anticipating the "real" stuff from the Bible at the end of each chapter's series of exercises and blown away at how quickly I could recognize various forms, starting with the noun system, prepositions, and constructs. When the translations include forms that have not been covered in the text, generous footnotes provide hints that explain those forms, so as to allow for smoother recognition of forms that have been covered while at the same time seeing syntactical relationships in context, even before the other forms are covered. Although my instructor assigned only a fraction of the examples of Bible translation from each chapter, I was "hooked" and invariably ended up doing the whole translation exercise each time, saying to myself "I can do this!". | | | Grammar Rules are Better Nov 30, 1999 |
I greatly benefited from Mounce's Greek Grammar and have greatly enjoyed the same approach applied to Hebrew. Learning grammatical rules as opposed to massive paradigms speeds up learning and enables longer memory retention. | | | Carlessly Constructed -- First Edition Needs Work Nov 30, 1999 |
I cannot recommend this workbook very highly, unless it improves considerably in subsequent revisions. (I have what I believe to be the first edition, copyright 2001, with the red cover.) It is useable, but only just barely so: it is painful to use, and it and does not do a very good job of practicing the student in a well-rounded fashion. It really ought to be supplemented (or replaced) with additional exercises from another source.
First, the exercises do not cover the material from the corresponding grammar in a well-rounded or consistent fashion. Some chapters receive short shrift, while others are loaded up with so many exercises that the student has no hope of completing them all. For instance, the exercise for chapter 11 is a scant two pages. Granted, this is an easy chapter, but rather than take this opportunity to review the preceding chapters, the authors present the student with two easy pages. In contrast, the exercises for chapter 14 span more than fifteen pages, including some quite difficult Hebrew composition, and the chapter 16 exercises comprise no fewer than thirty pages, so much that any competent editor would have red-penciled more than half of them.
Second, wholly insufficient care was taken when selecting the material for the exercises. Some of them cannot reasonably be expected to be completed in full even by model students. The worst case of this is the entirely-too-frequent occurance wherein a Hebrew composition exercise requires knowledge of a word the student will not learn for many more chapters. It is somewhat understandable when translation exercises going from Hebrew to English include words that the student has not had, since the lexicon in the back of the grammar is available, and it is desireable for the student to learn to use it. Even this happens far too frequently in this workbook, turning a few of the worse exercises into lexicon-page-flipping sessions so that the student is likely to lose track of the key point of the lesson in the face of looking up all those words, a bad case of "Let's You Save Me Some Work". If the authors had exercised a little more care, the exercises could be much better. Additionally, certain words (notably biconsonantal verbs) can be quite hard to find in the lexicon when their lexical form is an inflected form that the student will not study for many chapters yet and which as an extra consonant inserted into the middle of it that does not occur in the form in the exercise.
Still, this would be forgiveable in the Hebrew-to-English exercises, but when the same thing happens in exercises that require the student to compose Hebrew given the English, it is utterly inexcuseable. The lexicon does not go in that direction, and it is completely unreasonable to expect the student to conjure words out of thin air. This happens repeatedly in various exercises throughout the book, in some cases numerous times per exercise. (Sometimes there is an "answer key" in the form of a corresponding English-to-Hebrew section, but answer keys are supposed to be for _checking_ answers, not the only way to obtain the answer in the first place -- and sometimes there is no such key at all in any case.) This is just flagrantly careless beyond the bounds of all reason.
The exercises also sometimes require knowledge of grammatical constructs and word forms that have not been studied yet. For instance, the exercises by chapter 15 are already including verbals with inseparable prepositions, which are not covered in the grammar until chapter 20, without taking the trouble to tell the student what they are, mention which chapter in the grammar explains them, or even footnote their meaning.
Out of frustration, our teacher has actually instructed us to use an English translation, such as the NIV or NASB, to complete the Bible Translation exercises in the workbook, because there is no other way we could complete them. That should not be necessary; it was certainly was not necessary to do that in order to complete the Mounce workbook for the Greek, because Mounce was careful about selecting passages the student would actually be able to translate, and footnoting forms that had not yet been studied. These authors, in contrast, were not careful about those things.
This workbook is easily the worst feature of the BBHG textbook. I highly recommend that professors using that text develop their own exercises in preference to, or at least to supplement, the ones in this workbook. | | | Good workbook Nov 30, 1999 |
I have this workbook for my Hebrew class at seminary, and it offers many good exercises for hours of translation and parsing enjoyment. | | Write your own review about Basics Of Biblical Hebrew Workbook (2nd Edition)
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