vertical_align_top

Tiberian vocalization

System of diacritics
favorite
menu
add

The Tiberian vocalization, Tiberian pointing, or Tiberian niqqud (Hebrew: הַנִּקּוּד הַטְבֶרְיָנִי‎, hanniqquḏ haṭṭəḇeryāni) is a system of diacritics (niqqud) devised by the Masoretes of Tiberias to add to the consonantal text of the Hebrew Bible to produce the Masoretic Text. The system soon became used to vocalize other Hebrew texts as well.

Tiberian vocalization marks vowels and stress, distinguishes consonant quality and length, and serves as punctuation. While the Tiberian system was devised for Tiberian Hebrew, it has become the dominant system for vocalizing all forms of Hebrew. It has long since eclipsed the comparatively rudimentary Babylonian and Palestinian vocalization systems for writing Biblical Hebrew.

Consonant diacritics

edit

The sin dot distinguishes between the two values of ש‎. A dagesh indicates a consonant is geminate or unspirantized, and a raphe indicates spirantization. The mappiq indicates that ה‎ is consonantal, not silent, in syllable-coda position.

Vowel diacritics

edit

The seven vowel qualities of Tiberian Hebrew are indicated straightforwardly by distinct diacritics:

The diacritics qubutz and shuruq both represent but shuruq is used when the text uses full spelling (with waw as a mater lectionis). Each of the vowel phonemes could be allophonically lengthened; occasionally, the length is marked with metheg. Metheg also indirectly indicates when a following shva is vocal.

The ultrashort vowels are slightly more complicated. There were two graphemes corresponding to the vowel attested by alternations in manuscripts like ארֲריך~ארְריך, ואשמֳעָה~ואשמְעָה‎.‎. In addition, one of the graphemes could also be silent:

Shva was used both to indicate lack of a vowel (quiescent šwa, shva naḥ) and as another symbol to represent the phoneme (mobile šwa, shva naʻ), the latter also represented by hataf patah. The phoneme had a number of allophones; had to be written with shva rather than hataf patah when it was not pronounced as . Before a laryngeal-pharyngeal, mobile šwa was pronounced as an ultrashort copy of the following vowel (וּבָקְעָה‎) and as preceding (תְדַמְּיוּ֫נִי‎). Using ḥataf vowels was mandatory under gutturals but optional under other letters, and there was considerable variation among manuscripts.

That is referenced specifically by medieval grammarians:

If one argues that the dalet of 'Mordecai' (and other letters in other words) has hatef qames, tell him, 'but this sign is only a device used by some scribes to warn that the consonants should be pronounced fully, and not slurred over'.

The names of the vowel diacritics are iconic and show some variation:

Cantillation

edit

Cantillation signs mark stress and punctuation. Metheg may mark secondary stress, and maqqaf (hyphen) conjoins words into one stress unit, which normally takes only one cantillation mark on the final word in the unit.

See also

edit
  • Babylonian vocalization
  • Hebrew cantillation
  • Cardinal vowels
  • Niqqud
  • Palestinian vocalization
  • Tiberian Hebrew
edit

Connected lists

expand_more
0
edit
add
No connected lists found.

Categories

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No categories found.

Member of

expand_more
3
edit
add
helper: web search

Tags

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No tags found.

Communities

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No communities found.

Activity

expand_more
0
Community menu
Zenopy · about
terms of use · copyright · privacy
loaded in 0.16 secs
arrow_drop_down
photo_library