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A short Hebrew grammar
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Remarks on Dr Sharp's pieces on the words Elohim and Berith
Among which, In shewing the absolute Unfitness of the Arabic Tongue to give a Root to the Divine Name Elahîm, some account is given of the Chaldee, Syriac, Samaritan, and Arabic dialects; shewing them to have been all anciently one Language: as also what that Language was: with a Word on the Hebrew and Samaritan Alphabets, proving that those Alphabets could not have been chang'd, the one for the other, in Copying the Hebrew Scriptures, after the Babylonish Captivity, as hath been pretended. By Benjamin Holloway, LL. B. Rector of Middleton-Stony, Oxfordshire -
Originals physical and theological sacred and profane
Or an essay towards a discovery of the first descriptive ideas in things, by discovery of the simple or primary roots in words; As the same were, from the Beginning, rightly applied by Believers; and afterwards, perverted by Infidels. In which some Hundreds of Hebrew Words are traced to their first Themata; and their original, as well as derived or deflected Reasons and Meanings, shewn; according to the Order in which they do occur, in Leusden's---Compendium Biblicum, as far as to the 12th Chapter of Exodus. By Benjamin Holloway, LL. B. Rector of Middleton-Stony, Oxfordshire -
Two dissertations concerning the etymology and scripture-meaning of the Hebrew words Elohim and Berith
Occasioned by some notions lately advanced in relation to them. By Thomas Sharp, D. D. Archdeacon of Northumberland, and Prebendary of Durham -
An hebrew grammar: formed on the usage of the words by the inspired writers
being, an attempt to make the learning of Hebrew easy. By Julius Bate, A.M -
Grammatica Hebræa
sive methodus brevis discendi linguam sanctam sine punctis Masoreticis -
Mr. Bate's answer to Dr. Sharp's two dissertations answered
being a vindication of the etymology and scripture-meaning of elohim and berith. By George Kalmár, E