4.4 Parsing vs. Inflecting
- When we take a base word and do something with it, such as change its gender or number, we call that inflecting the word
- For example, say you had the English word
mouse
. The wordmice
would be inflectingmouse
into its plural form - In this course, inflecting is kept to a minimum.
- Reading the Hebrew Bible never requires this skill59
- For example, say you had the English word
Parsing is somewhat of the opposite concept where we take an inflected word and break it down into its base form to determine its meaning
- For example, let’s say you had the English word
mice
, you didn’t know what it meant and needed to look it up.- Let’s further assume there was no dictionary entry for
mice
(Hebrew dictionaries often do not have separate entries for a word’s plural forms).
- You would need to PARSE it =
Mice
is the plural form ofmouse.
In other words,mice
is two or more of whatever amouse
is. - You could then look up
mouse
and be on your way - Reading the Hebrew Bible does require us to parse
- Let’s further assume there was no dictionary entry for
When we parse a word, we identify the lexical form and the inflected person, gender, and number to understand what the word is communicating to us
- We also have identified the lexical form so we can look it up in a dictionary
- Beginning with this lesson, you will see an
Anki
chapter calledWorkbook
, which will have some activities like parsing
Since inflecting can helpful when learning about verb forms, some of the Unit III
Ruth Pursuit
activities will involve a small amount of inflecting↩︎