Can someone share a few screenshots with tme of the Lexham Discourse Hebrew Bible Dataset so I can make an intelligent decision about purchasing this product. I am interested in the Old Testament portion. Thanks.
Any particular passage in Old Testament ?
Screen shot shows pop-up from a Personal Book to customize Discourse questions => Suggestion: Discourse Greek NT more customizable
Lexham Discourse Hebrew Bible Dataset is usable in Bibles with Reverse Interlinear:
Keep Smiling [:)]
Many thanks for these. Do you recommend this resource?
Will it show up in Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia: with Westminster Hebrew Morphology. (1996). (electronic ed.). Stuttgart; Glenside PA: German Bible Society; Westminster Seminary?
I never use the reverse interlinears, but I notice it shows up in your ESV? Or am I understanding that incorrectly?
I never use the reverse interlinears,
In case you don't know, you may never see the reverse interlinear but many of the features of Logos depend upon it to work.
How interesting. I did not know that. Do you recommend this resource, MJ?
Does in mine (SESB 2.0)
Regarding how useful, my thoughts:
1. If you say 80-90% OT, then why not? In areas I target, even loose info can still provide clues, as long as not terribly expensive. Hebrew doesn't have a big corpus to work with (especially narrowing into time periods). Clues matter.
2. Discourse, as a catch-all, tries to rise to the next level above morphs. It catches what native-hearers would automatically 'hear'. Quite often, it's word order, a repetition, a code glue-word, etc
3. The problem revolves around 'what's normal'. Greek has an extensive set of examples to 'hear' abnormal. Hebrew, however, is an iffy world ... limited examples, ancient, and same-family semitic bounciness. For example, one semitic sees word order as either way; another sees word order as important.
Again, if OT's your happiness, why not. One nice thing, is it keeps getting refined. It improves.
I basically agree with Denise with the addition that you might want to read a short introduction to discourse analysis.
MJ,, I have been meaning to say, for a long time, that I love the quote in your signature: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."
Thank you. Some quotes are too good to ever change ...