- The
Masoretic Text (MT or 𝕸; Hebrew: נֻסָּח הַמָּסוֹרָה, romanized: Nūssāḥ hamMāsōrā, lit. 'Text of the Tradition') is the
authoritative Hebrew and Aramaic...
- Pentateuch, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and most
recently the 10th-century
medieval Masoretic Text
compiled by the Masoretes,
currently used in
Rabbinic Judaism. The...
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those in the
Masoretic Text,
which were
affirmed as
canonical in
Rabbinic Judaism. The
Septuagint Book of
Jeremiah is
shorter than the
Masoretic Text. The...
-
Scrolls used
parashot divisions,
although they
differ slightly from the
Masoretic divisions. The
Hebrew Bible was also
divided into some
larger sections...
- Samaritanism. Some 6,000
differences exist between the
Samaritan and the
Jewish Masoretic Text. Most are
minor variations in the
spelling of
words or grammatical...
- ("Teaching"), the Nevi'im ("Prophets"), and the
Ketuvim ("Writings"). The
Masoretic Text is the
medieval version of the Tanakh—written in
Hebrew and Aramaic—that...
-
elaborate system of lifespans, "generations", and
other means by
which the
Masoretic Hebrew Bible (the text of the
Bible most
commonly in use today) measures...
-
ancestral line from Noah to Abraham, he is the son of
Arpachshad (in the
Masoretic Text and
Samaritan Pentateuch[full
citation needed]) or
Cainan (in the...
-
Seligman (Isaac) Baer (1825–1897) was a
Masoretic scholar, and an
editor of the
Hebrew Bible and of the
Jewish liturgy. He was born in Mosbach, the northern...
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Tiberias to add to the
consonantal text of the
Hebrew Bible to
produce the
Masoretic Text. The
system soon
became used to
vocalize other Hebrew texts as well...