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Neo-Aramaic - Khan, Geoffrey. Neo-Aramaic Dialect Studies  

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Buy this book together with John Rufus and the World Vision of Anti-Chalcedonean Culture by Jan-Eric Steppa
This volume contains a collection of papers presented at the workshop on various aspects of the grammar of Neo-Aramaic, with special attention to the North Eastern Neo-Aramaic dialect group. The papers include descriptions of several hitherto undescribed dialects together with sample texts and also studies of various aspects of phonology, morphology and syntax of the dialects.+This book deals with the works of the anti-Chalcedonian hagiographer, John Rufus, and traces the basic motives behind the opposition against the council of Chalcedon in the fifth century through an attempt to reconstruct a specific anti-Chalcedonian culture.  As part of the eastern monastic culture, it considered itself a counter-culture guarding purity of ascetic conduct and orthodoxy from being defiled by the perverseness of the majority.  Reading John Rufus' hagiography, we find ourselves in the midst of a cosmological warfare between good and evil, where the great heroes of the anti-Chalcedonian movement enter into history as God's warriors against the rebellion of demons and heretics.Save $31.95
Total List Price: $213.00
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Khan, Geoffrey. Neo-Aramaic Dialect Studies  

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Title:Neo-Aramaic Dialect Studies
Subtitle:Proceedings of a Workshop on Neo-Aramaic held in Cambridge 2005
Series:Gorgias Neo-Aramaic Studies 1
Publisher:Gorgias Press LLC
Publication Date:5/2008
Availability:In Print
ISBN:978-1-59333-423-9
Language:English and Syriac
Format:Hardback, 6 x 9 in
Volumes:1
Pages:i-viii+204

This volume contains a collection of papers on various aspects of the grammar of Neo-Aramaic, with special attention to the North Eastern Neo-Aramaic dialect group. The papers include descriptions of numerous hitherto undescribed dialects, including those of Tyare, Sat, Calla, Barwar, Karamlesh, Telkepe, Peshabur and those of the Aqra region. Some papers deal with diachronic issues and discuss the relationship of the modern dialects with earlier forms of Aramaic. Particular attention is given by some contributions to syntactic structure and function. The traditions of Neo-Aramaic Bible translation are studied in one paper.

Geoffrey Khan holds a Ph.D. in Semitic Languages, from the School of Oriental and African Studies, London (1984). He is currently Professor of Semitic Philology, at the University of Cambridge. In 1998, he was elected Fellow of the British Academy and in 2004 was awarded the Lidzbarski Gold Medal for Semitic Philology.




Khan, Geoffrey. Neo-Aramaic Dialect Studies
ISBN:978-1-59333-423-9
Weight:1 LBS.
Price:$115.00
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