-
Semitic language, but
likely not
Canaanitic. The Deir Alla Inscription,
written in a
dialect with
Aramaic and
South Canaanitic characteristics,
which is classified...
-
translation of the term
shophet used in the
Masoretic Text (as well as by
other Canaanitic-speaking societies), the
position as
described in
Judges 12:7–15 is an...
-
region called Que in ****yrian
sources or Kue/Quoah in
biblical sources.
Canaanitic tribes settled in the
south of
Canaan between Hor and Negeb, although...
- Hebrew, is an
archaic form of the
Hebrew language, a
language in the
Canaanitic branch of the
Semitic languages spoken by the
Israelites in the area known...
- with the
definite article ha-ophel, is a
common noun
known from two
Canaanitic languages,
Biblical Hebrew and Moabitic. As a
place name or description...
-
Jewish emissaries, merchants, craftsmen, or
other tradesmen among the
Canaanitic-speaking
Phoenicians from Tyre
might have
brought them to Tarshish. Although...
- l'amulette d'Arslan Tash" in RHR, Paris, 1939,
BASOR 1939 T. H. Gaster: "A
Canaanitic Magical Text" in OR, Rome, 1942, Vol. XI, p. 41ff 4.
Gaster "The Magical...