[Heb-NACO] pronunciaton of kamats with meteg

Biella, Joan jbie at loc.gov
Mon Apr 8 09:39:09 EDT 2013


Here are some remarks on metheg by my two favorite Hebrew grammarians.  It's hard for me to transcribe voweled Hebrew script in e-mail, so I've just marked all the vowels with metheg in RED.  I hope you can follow the arguments below.
Joan

Lambdin, T.O.  Introduction to Biblical Hebrew.  New York : Scribers, c1971, pages xxvii-xxviii

Metheg
The metheg is a short perpendicular stroke placed under a consonant and to the left of the vowel sign (if any).  It serves several purposes in the orthography, of which the following are the most important:

1)  Since the vowels ā and ē are regularly replaced by ə in open syllables two or more places before the main stress, their appearance in such positions may be regarded as anomalous.  They are usually marked with metheg:
ānoki    I
bērakhtani         you blessed me

2)  In fact, any long vowel occurring two or more syllables before the main stress may be so marked, although manuscripts are inconsistent in this.  Compare
hōshaʻ  save!
hōshiʻeni           save me!
This usage is particularly important with the vowel qamets, which is a short vowel o in closed, unaccented syllables and a long vowel ā elsewhere.  This metheg is used with qamets = ā in any doubtful position to ensure the correct reading:
yevārekheni      he will bless me (not yevorkheni)

3)  Short vowels before the main stress usually occur in closed syllables.  Whenever the contrary occurs, the vowel may be marked with metheg:
tāʻămod                        she will stand
ohŏlo    his tent
This last example, with qamets = o, would seem to cancel out th eusefulness of metheg for distinguishing between the two values of qamets mentioned above.  Actually, this is not often so, since qamets = ā is very rarely followed by qamets = o in the next syllable, but rather by ă:  e.g. bāḥăru (they chose).

Gesenius’ Hebrew Grammar as edited and enlarged by the late E. Kautzsch. 2nd English edition revised by A.E. Cowley. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1966, pages 50-51.

In all these cases the Jewish grammarians regard the Metheg accompanying the Qameṣ as indicating a Qameṣ raḥabh (broad Qameṣ) and therefore read the Qameṣ as ā ; thus pā-ʻŏlo, dā-reban, pā-ʻŏləkha, qā-dāshim.  But neither the origin of these forms, nor the analogous formations in Hebrew and in the cognate languages, nor the transcription of proper names in the LXX [e.g.
Νοομι], allows us to regard this view as correct.


From: heb-naco-bounces+jbie=loc.gov at lists.service.ohio-state.edu [mailto:heb-naco-bounces+jbie=loc.gov at lists.service.ohio-state.edu] On Behalf Of Heidi G Lerner
Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2013 11:37 AM
To: Hebrew Name Authority Funnel
Subject: [Heb-NACO] pronunciaton of kamats with meteg

I am reading Sefer Rut on Shavuot and I have a question on the pronunciation of
נעמי when the 1st kamats under the "נ" has a meteg next to it. Normally נעמי is pronounced "Noʻomi".
However, in Sefer Rut it is very often written with the meteg. Wouldn't that mean that it should be pronounced "Naʻomi"?
To the best of my limited knowledge the meteg can appear with a long vowel in an unaccented syllable.

"Meteg is also sometimes used in Biblical Hebrew to mark a long vowel</wiki/Vowel_length>. While short and long vowels are largely allophonic, they are not always predictable from spelling, e.g. ויראו 'and they saw' vs. ויראו 'and they feared'. Meteg's indication of length also indirectly indicates that a following shva</wiki/Shva> is vocal, as in the previous case. Note that this may distinguish qamatz gadol and qatan, e.g. שמרה 'she guarded' vs. שמרה 'guard (volitive)'."--Wikipedia.



Any confirmation of the correct pronunciation will be appreciated.



Thanks, Heidi





--
Heidi G. Lerner
Hebraica/Judaica Cataloger
Metadata Development Unit
Stanford University Libraries
Stanford, CA 94305-6004
e-mail: lerner at stanford.edu<mailto:lerner at stanford.edu>
ph: 650-725-9953
fax: 650-725-1120

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