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Compendious Syriac Grammar. By Theodor Nöldeke. Translated from the second and improved German edition by James A. Crichton, D.D. (Williams & Norgate, 1904.)

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Compendious Syriac Grammar. By Theodor Nöldeke. Translated from the second and improved German edition by James A. Crichton, D.D. (Williams & Norgate, 1904.)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Abstract

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Type
Notices of Books
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1905

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References

page 189 note 1 F. C. Burkitt, Early Eastern Christianity, p. 156.

page 190 note 1 One would have been glad also of a subject index, e.g., for references to such details as Hebraisms, differences between Eastern and Western punctuation, etc., etc.

page 190 note 2 E.g., šĕladdû, ‘ corpse,’ from the Ass. šalamtu (p. 58); in the earlier edition very doubtfully derived from σκελετ⋯ν

page 191 note 1 E.g., contrast the use of au in imitation of the Greek ἤ with the purely Syriac idiom men dĕ- (p. 196, n. 1).