13.19 3נ and 3ת Verbs
A Dagesh Forte is your clue that something is different
- We mentioned above how a Sheva will be placed before a Finite sufformative (if possible)
- When ת and נ have a Silent Sheva, each may assimilate depending on the letter that follows
- In other words, the verb will lose \(R_3\) and a Dagesh Forte will be placed into the first letter of the sufformative
- An \(R_3\) of ת with a Silent Sheva will only assimilate when the sufformative begins with ת
- Not כָּרַ֫תְתָּ*104 but כָּרַ֫תָּ
- Not כְּרַתְתֶּם*, but כְּרַתֶּ֫ם
- IMPORTANT: Note how the Dagesh in the ת shifts from a Lene to a Forte (because the Dagesh is now preceded by a vowel that is not a Sheva)
- This is your cue that something has changed, usually that a letter is missing
- In theory, the root could be either כרן or כרת, but you already know כרת from your vocabulary work (and there is no verb root כרן)
- An \(R_3\) of נ with a Silent Sheva will tend to assimilate to either נ or ת
- נַתַן is an extremely common 3נ verb meaning “to give”
- Not נָתַ֫נְנוּ*, but נָתַ֫נּוּ
- Not נָתַ֫נְתָּ*, but נָתַ֫תָּ
Remember, the * means the Hebrew word is an impossibility, but is shown for illustrative purposes↩︎