16.8 QI Geminate
Geminates and Biconsonantals can be tricky, but they are relatively infrequent - the best course is to build vocabularly knowledge and use the preformatives and sufformatives to identify
- The most frequent Geminate verbs are included as Hebrew GRAMMAR Quest vocabulary
- Note the attributes below but do not become overly concerned with them:
- \(V_P = \bar A\) as in: יָ
- Geminate Lose \(R_2\) - Dagesh Forte in remaining twin letter (unless word-final or guttural letter)
- In alternate forms, the Dagesh appears in \(R_1\) and \(V_P = I\) (see table below)
- There is also a Geminate form (let’s call it “Type 2”) that takes \(V_P = \bar E\)
- \(V_S\) and Accent shift to \(V_1\)
- The most notable feature is that there will be a connecting vowel before a sufformative that starts with a consonant
- QP2fp - סַבּוֹתֶן
- QI2fp - תְּסֻבֶּ֫ינָה
- Otherwise, the Imperfect Preformatives/Sufformatives remain
Gem | Gem (alt) | Gem T2 | Strong | |
---|---|---|---|---|
3ms | יָסֹב | יִסֹּב | יֵתַם | יִקְטֹל |
3mp | יָסֹ֫בּוּ | יִסֹּּבּוּ | יֵתַ֫מּוּ | יִקְטְלוּ |