Site for researching all meanings of Hebrew Bible.

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From Without Vowels project
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Victor Porton (talk | contribs)
Victor Porton (talk | contribs)
pretentious purpose
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Also it is much easier to study partial Hebrew grammar without vowels and other niqqudot.
Also it is much easier to study partial Hebrew grammar without vowels and other niqqudot.


This site is created with a pretentious purpose to collect all possible translations and all commentaries for the entire Hebrew Bible.
This site is created with a [[Project:BibleWiki|pretentious purpose to collect all possible translations and all commentaries for the entire Hebrew Bible]].


This is a '''wiki''' site that is you can edit it. While editing this site, you must follow [[Project:Rules|project moderation rules]].
This is a '''wiki''' site that is you can edit it. While editing this site, you must follow [[Project:Rules|project moderation rules]].

Revision as of 19:07, 12 February 2016

This site is intended to analyze the meaning of Tanakh (Hebrew Bible, also known as Old Testament among Christians) as it was originally written, without vowels and other niqqudot but only with consonants.

This site was created based on the belief that Tanakh has many different senses because the sense changes when other vowels are inserted instead of the "standard" vowels of Jewish tradition.

Also it is much easier to study partial Hebrew grammar without vowels and other niqqudot.

This site is created with a pretentious purpose to collect all possible translations and all commentaries for the entire Hebrew Bible.

This is a wiki site that is you can edit it. While editing this site, you must follow project moderation rules.

On this wiki is uploaded the text of Tanakh, verse by verse (you can start here).

Among of a verse are displayed the previous (except of the first verse of a book) and the next (except of the last verse of a book) verses in gray color with the purpose to allow the user to easily relate the text of a verse with the previous and next verses.

Every word is hyperlinked. Clicking the word you come to the page which is intended to contain the grammar of this word (without vowels). The grammar concerns the declined form of the word, not its primary form. (You are however free to create a page for the primary form of the word and interlink the pages with the primary and declined forms.)

The text of Tanakh is divided into fragments (so called parashot) with || markers (denoting so called Pe-marks) and into smaller fragment with | (so called Samekh marks). If you do some translation of a Tanakh fragment please click the link Exegesis and edit that page to insert your translation.

When editing a wiki page, to enter a Hebrew word with a reference to our without-vowels dictionary, click the "Aleph" icon in the editor toolbar and enter the word. Alternatively you may select a non-hyperlinked Hebrew word and click "Aleph" in toolbar in order to turn this Hebrew word into a hyperlink to our dictionary.

The text of Tanakh was obtained from this site. It is converted into the wiki format by this Python program

You cannot edit pages with Tanakh text (Tanakh:* namespace), because they are created automatically and your edit cannot overwrite it.

Philosophy

The primary reason for creating this site is the belief that Tanakh is the word of God and it should be studied in all senses possible. Non-believing linguists/historians which wish to analyze the original meaning of Bible are also welcome.

This is not "Bible code"

So called Bible Code is the concept stating that reading Bible not character by character but for instance skipping every 50 letters, we can get a message.

There is certain skepticism regarding Bible Code, because of lack of proper reason to skip every say 50 characters reading Bible.

This project is different, it is well founded by the fact that initially Tanakh was written without vowels and other niqqudot, and thus it is the natural way to read Tanakh without them.

That saying, this project is like Bible Code but without skipping characters.

Many adherents to Jewish tradition would oppose reading Tanakh without vowels because they are adherents to the verbal tradition. Nevertheless many adherents of Jewish tradition accept Bible Code. That makes no sense to accept Bible Code but not to accept Without Vowels project, because if one accepts Bible Code then according to common sense he should also accept reading Tanakh without vowels.

Useful internal links

Useful resources

You can use 2LetterLookup to look up meanings of Hebrew words.

Semantic Dictionary of Biblical Hebrew (UBS) is a more traditional detailed Hebrew dictionary.

Hebrew with strongs and parallel English

Misc links