Now it’s time to start all over
again and organize things by subject.
First, BH is not a tense language. It
is an aspect language, like modern Arabic, Russian, and Chinese as well as ancient
Semitic languages.
The aspectual world hinges on expressing
repetition, process, or completion, in aspects called imperfec(ive),
progressive, or perfect(ive). Russian and Arabic do not have the progressive
aspect in morphology; they express the same concept in other ways.
Aspectual languages generally leave
out the copula in equational sentences because equation is not one of the
above.
Aspectual languages generally have a
separate form that is called in when the nuances of the aspects don’t apply to
a given context.
In Biblical Hebrew (BH), the uses of
imperfect aspect are as follows.
1.
vav plus imperfect in VS
order is “narrative past”, used within an episode to track the progress of the
plot.
2.
vav plus subject plus
imperfect is a relative or coordinate clause.
3.
without vav in SV order is
possibly a true future tense usage.
4.
without vav may also be an
imperfect of process; this first turns up in Leviticus and may be a clue to the
relationship between imperfect and progressive aspects.
5.
vav plus imperfect in the
2nd singular or plural define the generalized or definitional envelope of
commandments or refer to a known cultural feature.
6.
in the 3rd person, in
portions about sacrificial ritual, imperfect provides the framework for the
ritual actions like the generalization envelope for a k’lal u-prat [u-k’lal]
structure.
7.
Preceded by ki or im is the
“if” clause in a law, usually a tort. Again, this is an envelope to a klal uprat
[uklal] structure.
8.
part of a parallel
structure in poetry and prophecy following a perfect verb as a parallel. They
will not use the same verb root and sometimes not the same binyan.
Next week I’ll start giving examples
of these usages.
Notice how the focus of the
imperfect on action, rather than completion, leads us directly to one of
Olrik’s principles. The normal world of an oral narrative is the
culture-related actions which the protagonist performs on his way to the
denouement. Yes, he has to complete each one of them to progress through the
narrative, but it’s the progress that matters, not the completion. This suggests
a relationship between narrative past and progressive aspect, although
narrative past is the normal verb form in narratives.
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