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Semitisms in Luke's Greek

A Descriptive Analysis of Lexical and Syntactical Domains of Semitic Language Influence in Luke's Gospel

Semitisms in Luke's Greek

A Descriptive Analysis of Lexical and Syntactical Domains of Semitic Language Influence in Luke's Gospel

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Hardback

£208.20

Publisher: Mohr Siebeck
ISBN: 9783161553363
Number of Pages: 684
Published: 23/04/2018
Width: 23.9 cm
Height: 16.3 cm
The Gospel of Luke has long been known for its variation between good, educated Greek and Semitic influences. In the last century, five theories have attempted to explain the Semitic influence: Semitic sources; imitation of the Greek Bible; the Greek of the ancient synagogue; literary code-switching between standard Greek and semitized Greek; and the social background of bilingualism. Albert Hogeterp and Adelbert Denaux revisit Luke's Greek and evaluate which alleged Semitisms of vocabulary and syntax are tenable in light of comparative investigation across corpora of Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic, literary as well as documentary, texts. They contend that Semitisms in Luke's Greek are only fully understood in light of a complementarity of linguistic backgrounds, and evaluate them in diachronic respect of Synoptic comparison and in synchronic respect of their place in Luke's narrative style and communicative strategy.

Albert Hogeterp, Adelbert Denaux

Born 1973; 2004 PhD in Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Groningen; currently research fellow at the Department of New Testament, University of the Free State (South Africa). Born 1938; 1990-2003 professor at the Faculty of Theology of the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium); since 2003 emeritus; dean emeritus of the Tilburg School of Catholic Theology, The Netherlands.