Sunday, June 30, 2019

Knitting -- sleeveless summer blouse

This is based on the V-neck vest. I like to have the points of my shoulders bare in our summer heat. Use a fingering weight cotton or linen yarn; the counts below are for Comfy Fingering and (Lindy Chain linen/cotton).

This takes at least a week, like knitting the body of a pullover. You need 5 50-gram balls of yarn.

Cable on 280 (300) stitches to a 24-inch size 3 (size 1) circular needle.
Work 10 rows k2/p2 rib (cable on 1 more stitch and work 11 rows seed stitch)
Mark the underarms and center front and back.
Work 130 (140) rounds to the armpits.
On the last two rounds, five stitches short of the underarm marker, work P2/K6/P2 to set up your selvages (4 stitches of seed stitch for the armhole edge).
Work the back above the armpits in stockinette for 30 rows.
Now do a k2TOG before and after the selvage (armhole edge) every 3 rows for 30 rows.
Work the last 5 (25) rows without decreasing. Total 65 (85) rows.
Leave all stitches on the needle.

On the front, work above the armpits in stockinette for 28 rows with the selvage (seed stitch armhole edging).
At the front center marker, set up the base of the V neck with P2/K6/P2 on a knit row, or K2/P6/K2 on a purl row (use seed stitch for 4 stitches at the center).
On the next row, decrease one at the selvage and one before the center, then P2/K3 or K2/P1/K2 depending on whether it's a knit row or purl row, respectively.
(Work 2 stitches of seed stitch at the edge of the vee and at the armhole with Lindy Chain).
Do the decreases at the VEE side EVERY row, at the ARMHOLE every THIRD row.
At row 65 stop decreasing. (Work to row 85 in Lindy Chain)
Knit to the back at the top across the selvage.
Repeat this for the other side of the front.
Work 2 rows of seed stitch at the neck in the back and bind off.

Here is how the front of this top looks. The purple one is Comfy Fingering and the green one is Lindy Chain.






Now, why did I have you set a center back marker and not have you do anything with it? That's for next week.


Thursday, June 27, 2019

21st Century Bible Hebrew -- Genesis 4:17-20, "decreeing a child"

Genesis 4:17-20
 
יז וַיֵּ֤דַע קַ֨יִן֙ אֶת־אִשְׁתּ֔וֹ וַתַּ֖הַר וַתֵּ֣לֶד אֶת־חֲנ֑וֹךְ וַֽיְהִי֙ בֹּ֣נֶה עִ֔יר וַיִּקְרָא֙ שֵׁ֣ם הָעִ֔יר כְּשֵׁ֖ם בְּנ֥וֹ חֲנֽוֹךְ:
יח וַיִּוָּלֵ֤ד לַֽחֲנוֹךְ֙ אֶת־עִירָ֔ד וְעִירָ֕ד יָלַ֖ד אֶת־מְחֽוּיָאֵ֑ל וּמְחִיָּיאֵ֗ל יָלַד֙ אֶת־מְת֣וּשָׁאֵ֔ל וּמְתֽוּשָׁאֵ֖ל יָלַ֥ד אֶת־לָֽמֶךְ:
יט וַיִּֽקַּח־ל֥וֹ לֶ֖מֶךְ שְׁתֵּ֣י נָשִׁ֑ים שֵׁ֤ם הָֽאַחַת֙ עָדָ֔ה וְשֵׁ֥ם הַשֵּׁנִ֖ית צִלָּֽה:
כ וַתֵּ֥לֶד עָדָ֖ה אֶת־יָבָ֑ל ה֣וּא הָיָ֔ה אֲבִ֕י ישֵׁ֥ב אֹ֖הֶל וּמִקְנֶֽה:
 
Translation: Qain knew his wife, she became pregnant and gave birth to Chanokh; it must have been boneh ir that he named the city for his son Chanokh.
There was born to Chanokh Irad and Irad sired Mechuyael and Mechiyael sired Metushael and Metushael sired Lemekh.
Lemekh took himself two wives; the name of one was Adah and the name of the other was Tsillah.
Adah gave birth to Yaval; he was the father of those living in tents and flocks.
 
Vocabulary
 
עִיר
                                                                                           city
אֹהֶל
tent
מִקְנֶה
flocks
 
Yeda in the first verse of this section is perfect aspect; this is a new episode. The ancient question of “where did Qain’s wife come from” is irrelevant. Olrik says: oral narratives don’t give all the gory details, they are stripped down to essentials.  It’s not important to the story who was Chanokh’s mother or where she came from. The city had a tradition that it had been named after the son of Qain who built it, and that’s what is recorded here.
 
And so va-y’hi “it must have been when” plus the progressive boneh and so on.
 
Boneh ir is a construct phrase, using the progressive in a descriptive sense that edges over into the substantive. But it also takes advantage of progressive in the sense of something just done.
 
Va-yivaled is nifal in the narrative past. It sounds strange to say that it was decreed that Irad was born to Chanokh, but it suggests that there wasn’t necessarily a biological relationship.  Irad inherited from Chanokh due to a legal decree. The biology was irrelevant.
 
Yalad, on the other hand, means “sired” when used with a masculine subject. We’ll see the hifil later, and it’s a beautiful demonstration that BH uses verbs in a causative way even if they aren’t hifil.  That’s on top of using hifil without causative meaning, with a strictly transitive meaning. So just like I told you to kick “intensive” to the curb with reference to piel, you can kick “causative” to the curb with reference to hifil.  They are labels that don’t really help you get at the meaning of the material.
 
What yalad is not, is yoled which we’ll see soon.
 

Thursday, June 20, 2019

21st Century Bible Hebrew -- hufal binyan

Genesis 4:13-16
יג וַיֹּ֥אמֶר קַ֖יִן אֶל־יְהוָֹ֑ה גָּד֥וֹל עֲוֹנִ֖י מִנְּשֽׂוֹא:  
יד הֵן֩ גֵּרַ֨שְׁתָּ אֹתִ֜י הַיּ֗וֹם מֵעַל֙ פְּנֵ֣י הָֽאֲדָמָ֔ה וּמִפָּנֶ֖יךָ אֶסָּתֵ֑ר וְהָיִ֜יתִי נָ֤ע וָנָד֙ בָּאָ֔רֶץ וְהָיָ֥ה כָל־מֹֽצְאִ֖י יַֽהַרְגֵֽנִי:
טו וַיֹּ֧אמֶר ל֣וֹ יְהֹוָ֗ה לָכֵן֙ כָּל־הֹרֵ֣ג קַ֔יִן שִׁבְעָתַ֖יִם יֻקָּ֑ם וַיָּ֨שֶׂם יְהוָֹ֤ה לְקַ֨יִן֙ א֔וֹת לְבִלְתִּ֥י הַכּוֹת־אֹת֖וֹ כָּל־מֹֽצְאֽוֹ:
טז וַיֵּ֥צֵא קַ֖יִן מִלִּפְנֵ֣י יְהוָֹ֑ה וַיֵּ֥שֶׁב בְּאֶֽרֶץ־נ֖וֹד קִדְמַת־עֵֽדֶן:

Translation: Qain said to the Lord: is my sin great beyond bearing?
Behold you have expelled me today from the surface of the earth, from Your Presence, I shall be in hiding; a wanderer and trembler on earth, from now on anybody who finds me will kill me.
The Lord said to him, therefore anybody killing Qain, he is avenged shivataim; the Lord set for Qain a sign for anybody finding him not killing him.
Qain went out from before the Lord; he lived in the land of Nod eastward of Eden.
 
Now. Why do we have yuqam?
 
This is hufal binyan which I mentioned before.  It looks a lot like hifil except for the “oo” in the first syllable.  Like pual, it is used differently in narratives compared to legal material.
 
In legal material, hufal is the binyan of a legal definition.   When an ox kills more than one person, it is defined in law as huad, noticeably dangerous.  The same term is used of a murderer. 
 
Equally importantly, hurtsah is used of a sacrifice which has been performed according to all the details of the ritual that applies, meaning that it’s acceptable.  In BH, rotseh does not mean “want”; that’s what it means in Mishnaic Hebrew and Modern Hebrew as the auxiliary verb for the volitive.  BH does the volitive in morphology; MH and MH use periphrasis.
 
In narratives hufal seems to indicate following a norm of behavior or a local custom.  Hugad tends to mean receiving information only through official sources.
 
Which do we have here?  The audience would have understood yuqam to mean court-ordered sanctions for a killing.  In Qain’s case, it’s exile because he’s guilty of manslaughter, not murder.  In the case of anybody who kills Qain, it will be whatever fits the case – the death penalty or exile.  And since nobody has killed Qain yet, we don’t know what that will be.
 
Why not use nifal?  Nifal is used for court rulings, not legal definitions.  Pual is not appropriate because it says that what happened may not meet the legal definition expressed in hufal.  Qual is not appropriate because in laws, it points to consequences that are unexpected or counterintuitive.
 
Each of the binyanim has a specific role.  While piel and hifil can both be used transitively when the qal is intransitive, or as action verbs when qal is descriptive, I have yet to notice a case when piel and hifil both exist for a verb and both are transitive and have identical meaning.  In such cases, one of them has a special meaning.  I’ll do a special lesson on this much later.  Let’s get through the basics first.
 
You will see yuqam again soon and that will identify an important issue about the Qain saga.
 

Thursday, June 13, 2019

21st Century Bible Hebrew -- Genesis 4:13-16, trop controls

Genesis 4:13-16
 
יג וַיֹּ֥אמֶר קַ֖יִן אֶל־יְהוָֹ֑ה גָּד֥וֹל עֲוֹנִ֖י מִנְּשֽׂוֹא:
יד הֵן֩ גֵּרַ֨שְׁתָּ אֹתִ֜י הַיּ֗וֹם מֵעַל֙ פְּנֵ֣י הָֽאֲדָמָ֔ה וּמִפָּנֶ֖יךָ אֶסָּתֵ֑ר וְהָיִ֜יתִי נָ֤ע וָנָד֙ בָּאָ֔רֶץ וְהָיָ֥ה כָל־מֹֽצְאִ֖י יַֽהַרְגֵֽנִי:
טו וַיֹּ֧אמֶר ל֣וֹ יְהֹוָ֗ה לָכֵן֙ כָּל־הֹרֵ֣ג קַ֔יִן שִׁבְעָתַ֖יִם יֻקָּ֑ם וַיָּ֨שֶׂם יְהוָֹ֤ה לְקַ֨יִן֙ א֔וֹת לְבִלְתִּ֥י הַכּוֹת־אֹת֖וֹ כָּל־מֹֽצְאֽוֹ:
טז וַיֵּ֥צֵא קַ֖יִן מִלִּפְנֵ֣י יְהוָֹ֑ה וַיֵּ֥שֶׁב בְּאֶֽרֶץ־נ֖וֹד קִדְמַת־עֵֽדֶן:
 
Translation: Qain said to the Lord: is my sin great beyond bearing?
Behold you have expelled me today from the surface of the earth, from Your Presence, I shall be in hiding; a wanderer and trembler on earth, from now on anybody who finds me will kill me.
The Lord said to him, therefore anybody killing Qain, he is avenged shivataim; the Lord set for Qain a sign for anybody finding him not killing him.
Qain went out from before the Lord; he lived in the land of Nod eastward of Eden.
 
Vocabulary
 
עֲוֹנִי
                                                                              My sin
מִנְּשׂוֹא
… than bearing
אֶסָּתֵר
I shall be hidden
שִׁבְעָתַיִם
Seven pairs
 
So now that you have recovered from my translation of hashomer achi anokhi, verse 14 presents another issue. Esater is a nifal imperfect and remember, a nifal is a decree. Look under the previous word; there is a little curve pointing to ha-adamah. Mi-pney ha-adamah u-mi-panekha” is a phrase. The verb is separated from it. Most translations give the idea that Qain thinks he can hide from Gd. The trop disagrees.
 
What you have is two parts of the verse falling each into two halves. The gerashti in the part before the etnach results in Qain being a na va-nad, a phrase after the etnach.  The esater before the etnach is because of his fear that “anybody who finds me will kill me.” What Qain does is decree upon himself to hide.
 
Also notice that the “sign of Qain” is set to protect him.
 
Yahargeni: this is the Jewish law of manslaughter; the killer has to get to a city of refuge and the relatives of the dead can avenge the killing whenever he is not within the city precincts. When this happens, it’s not a legal execution at the hands of the court but it also is not murder. However, there are no cities yet as we are about to see.
 
Mi-n’so echoes the “beyond” concept from the previous verse. The rabbis turn this around; is what Qain did really beyond Gd’s capability to bear with human imperfections?
 
“Seven pairs” is shivataim. It looks like a class of nouns in Hebrew that end in –aim and come in pairs. Eynaim eyes, raglaim feet, aznaim ears. Also shnataim two years; sh’vuaim two weeks; yomaim two days.
 
But what is shivataim doing here? That can only be understood in the context of the rest of the episode, which is coming up.
 

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Knitting -- getting a new hold

I love watching old movies, as you know if you remember my Constance Bennet tuxedo post.

So I was watching a noir film and one of the women prisoners was knitting with the right hand needle held high and pushed through the stitches, then she wrapped the yarn and pulled the right needle out.

Recently I was watching a British series on YouTube and one of the women characters used the same hold on her needles.

So I started googling. Turns out that this is called lever or Irish cottage or Pit style, as well as a "pencil hold", because your right hand holds the needle like a pencil, instead of with the same hold as your left hand.

Apparently it is mostly used with straight needles, but I tried it while working a linen top on  a circular needle. I was using KTBL on the odd rows and having trouble working quickly.  Until I changed to the pencil hold.

Here's how it works. Tension the yarn on your right hand. Use your left hand to push the stitch onto the right needle. Use your right hand to loop the yarn. Use your left hand to pull the inactive side of the loop off the right needle.

This video is great.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNlt_-F-3ZA

It shows how much faster purling goes with the pencil hold, because you don't have to move the yarn as much. The Continental style is supposed to work faster than the English style, but if you are uber-righthanded like me, your left hand cramps a lot unless you originally learned to knit Continental style. Pit style is more natural for me.

The video also talks about something I've seen on other websites. If you knit a lot, English or Continental style, you may have developed carpal tunnel or some other  repetitive motion syndrome. This is a different motion and it won't stress your hands or joints the same way.

The same person did a video for circular needles.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdHCqMBrIfU

The pencil hold, if I work up some speed with it, might help me with skirt patterns at freevintageknitting.com. But I have a lot of summer tops to finish -- and that's the next post.

Thursday, June 6, 2019

21st Century Bible Hebrew -- Genesis 4:9-12; who was guarding Hevel?

Genesis 4:9-12
 
ט וַיֹּ֤אמֶר יְהוָֹה֙ אֶל־קַ֔יִן אֵ֖י הֶ֣בֶל אָחִ֑יךָ וַיֹּ֨אמֶר֙ לֹ֣א יָדַ֔עְתִּי הֲשֹׁמֵ֥ר אָחִ֖י אָנֹֽכִי:
י וַיֹּ֖אמֶר מֶ֣ה עָשִׂ֑יתָ ק֚וֹל דְּמֵ֣י אָחִ֔יךָ צֹֽעֲקִ֥ים אֵלַ֖י מִן־הָֽאֲדָמָֽה:
יא וְעַתָּ֖ה אָר֣וּר אָ֑תָּה מִן־הָֽאֲדָמָה֙ אֲשֶׁ֣ר פָּֽצְתָ֣ה אֶת־פִּ֔יהָ לָקַ֛חַת אֶת־דְּמֵ֥י אָחִ֖יךָ מִיָּדֶֽךָ:
יב כִּ֤י תַֽעֲבֹד֙ אֶת־הָ֣אֲדָמָ֔ה לֹֽא־תֹסֵ֥ף תֵּת־כֹּחָ֖הּ לָ֑ךְ נָ֥ע וָנָ֖ד תִּהְיֶ֥ה בָאָֽרֶץ:
 
Translation: **** said to Qain where is Hevel your brother; he said I don’t know, is the one guarding my brother me?
He said what did you do? The voice of your brother’s bloods are crying to me from the earth.
Now you are cursed beyond the earth that opened its mouth for the purpose of taking the bloods of your brother from your hand.
When you work the earth it will not repeat giving its strength to you; a wanderer and trembler shall you be on earth.
 
Vocabulary
אָחִיךָ
                                                               Your brother
דְּמֵי
Blood, construct state of plural
פָּצְתָה
Opened, made a hole
פִּיהָ
Its mouth
כֹּחָהּ
Its strength
 
Notice the topic order of the last clause in verse 9, as well as the emphatic anokhi. Reversing this misses the point. Qain is asking, “is my brother’s guardian me?” Or is it Gd?
 
Verse 10 has no verb after “did you do”. Unless you read the Hebrew, you don’t realize that. Tsoakim is plural, and refers to d’mey, not to qol, voice. A translation probably ought to read “There’s a voice of your brother’s bloods [which are] crying to me,” etc. But this is one more example of how translations are not as good as reading the source document.
 
Notice that as the snake was cursed more than the wild animals, Qain is cursed more than the earth that was cursed through his father’s sin.
 
Which is another “not fair.” Qain did the same work as Adam. Hevel was an innovator, a rebel, a non-traditionalist. Why did Gd reward him and not the traditionalist Qain?
 
That’s why there would have been no sense issuing another commandment. There are people who look for excuses to do things they know they shouldn’t do. Deuteronomy has other phrasing that deals with this. The idea that you did something wrong because the other person gets different treatment is just evidence that you were looking for an excuse.  The Jews and their ancestors have known this for millennia.
 
And now the punishment, which I will explain more in the next lesson.
 

Sunday, June 2, 2019

DIY -- veggie burgers

I haven't posted in this column for a long time but some things came together one morning out of the news, so I decided to do this one.

A report in the British Medical Journal summarizes three large studies in separate nations about how processed food is shortening lives.

https://www.bmj.com/content/365/bmj.l1949

You are at a higher risk of dying young -- up to 60% higher -- compared to other people in your age cohort, if you eat more processed food than they do.

Kicker: that includes "health" food like veggie burgers. Check the ingredients. There may be dairy products in them. Including cheese. Look where cheese falls in the BMJ study.

Here's another way that dairy products are a flashpoint. Cows don't give milk unless they give birth. They are bred to produce a calf about every 3 years after they come to maturity. They have 2-4 calves during their lifetimes. Farmers cannot house, feed, and muck out for that many calves and still keep up their milk production. That's where veal comes from. If you are opposed to eating veal, you have to be opposed to production of unwanted calves, and you have to take away the demand for the dairy products that wouldn't exist without producing unwanted calves. So you can't eat anything with dairy products as an ingredient. If you didn't know this, it's because you're like the majority of people who know nothing about the food chain.

Look at most of the processed food on store shelves. How much of it contains dairy products? (This is an "oh shit" moment for a lot of you.)

The veggie burger I'm talking about also contains lecithin and guar gum. Lecithin, an emulsifier, along with other emulsifiers like the polysorbates in ice cream, has been implicated in causing obesity.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19288019

Guar gum belongs to a class of chemicals which seem to help with cholesterol. Guar gum is the only member of the class which does NOT help with cholesterol.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28733671

Now, vegan veggie burgers may not have the dairy products, but that doesn't mean they get off scot free. The Beyond Burger contains gum arabic. This is a conflict product. The only source of gum arabic is Sudan, and the income from it fuels war there.

The other product that uses gum arabic is all sodas, to keep the chemicals in suspension. All sodas, even the "diet" ones, promote obesity and Type II diabetes.

Meanwhile, you are better off making your own, not just veggie burgers, but everything else, like sun tea instead of sodas, so you aren't at the mercy of manufacturers who are making a pile off of killing you.

Here's a veggie burger recipe; I haven't tried it because being veggie is not one of my things. Make sure the egg you use in this recipe is free range; if you're lucky, your community may allow you to raise your own chickens. For the bread crumbs, remember way back when I posted how to brew your own sourdough starter from water and flour? Do it. Keep the crumbs. You can use them in this, or you can add them back into any bread you bake to enhance the flavor.
https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/85452/homemade-black-bean-veggie-burgers/