Site for researching all meanings of Hebrew Bible.
Grammar:Tutorial/Infinitive: Difference between revisions
Affiliate recommendation
Explore linguistics, Hebrew, and Bible study books 📚
Interested in how languages work? Discover books on linguistics, phonetics, grammar, etymology, semantics, Hebrew language studies, Biblical Hebrew, modern Hebrew, Bible study resources, commentaries, concordances, and the science of human language.
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
An infinitive may be used in a conjunction like a noun. | An infinitive may be used in a conjunction like a noun. | ||
In infinitive of 3-weak verbs the last ה is replaced with ות (in all binyanim, see below). | In infinitive of 3-weak verbs the last ה is replaced with ות (in all binyanim, see below). ות or ת is also sometimes added in 3-א verbs (Gesenius). | ||
==Infinitive with prepositions== | ==Infinitive with prepositions== | ||
Latest revision as of 23:11, 1 March 2015
{{#ifeq:no|no|}}
Infinitive (more exactly named “infinitive construct”) is just the root.
It may be translated to English as a gerund.
Pronoun suffixes may be used with infinitive.
Infinitive can take pronoun suffixes. Pronoun suffixes with an infinitive may express either a subject or an object of the action, dependently on a context.
An infinitive may be used in a conjunction like a noun.
In infinitive of 3-weak verbs the last ה is replaced with ות (in all binyanim, see below). ות or ת is also sometimes added in 3-א verbs (Gesenius).
Infinitive with prepositions
Infinitive X with the preposition כ means (“when it was X”).
Infinitive with the preposition ל means: 1. a purpose; 2. infinitive in English.
היה + ל + infinitive
means “to be going”.
על + noun + ל + infinitive
means that “noun” must do something (expressed by the infinitive).
