joeldruark-patch-1 (#659)

Reviewed-on: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/pulls/659
Co-authored-by: Joel D. Ruark <joeldruark@noreply.door43.org>
Co-committed-by: Joel D. Ruark <joeldruark@noreply.door43.org>
This commit is contained in:
Joel D. Ruark 2021-12-24 00:10:08 +00:00
parent 7585e5bd18
commit 16e13c9b16
10 changed files with 14 additions and 39 deletions

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Biblical Hebrew

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A :ref:`demonstrative pronoun<pronoun_demonstrative>` refers to a specific person(s) or thing(s) in particular. In English, the following words are
A ``demonstrative pronoun`` refers to a specific person(s) or thing(s) in particular. In English, the following words are
demonstrative pronouns: "this", "that", "these", "those".

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An ``indefinite pronoun`` is a pronoun that refers to a person(s) or thing(s) in general but not to any specific person or thing in
particular. In English, they are usually translated as "whoever” (in reference to persons) or "whatever" (when referring to
things).

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An ``interrogative pronoun`` is a pronoun that appears at the beginning of a clause/sentence and indicates that the clause/sentence
is an interrogative question rather than an indicative statement.

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A ``personal pronoun`` is a word that indirectly refers to a particular person(s) or thing(s). In English, the
following words are personal pronouns: "I", "we", "you", "he", "she", "they", "them".

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A ``relative pronoun`` is a pronoun that functions as a relative particle, that is, to introduce a phrase or clause that describes a noun.

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:github_url: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/src/branch/master/content/pronoun_indefinite.rst
.. _pronoun_indefinite:
Pronoun Indefinite
==================
Summary
-------
An indefinite pronoun is a pronoun that refers to a person(s) or thing(s) in general but not to any specific person or thing in
particular. In English, they are usually translated as "whoever” (in reference to persons) or "whatever" (when referring to
things).
.. include:: includes/pronoun_indefinite-summary.rst
Article
-------
Biblical Hebrew contains two indefinite pronouns, the pronoun מִי (in reference to persons) and the pronoun מָה
(in reference to things). These pronouns can also as :ref:`interrogative pronoun<pronoun_interrogative>`, especially when they
appear at the beginning of a clause/sentence. However, this is not a universal rule; the specific use of these pronouns must
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Form
----
Indefinite pronouns do not change their form based on number, gender, or person. However, the vowels can change depending on the
vocalization of the word immediately following the pronoun.

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:github_url: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/src/branch/master/content/pronoun_interrogative.rst
.. _pronoun_interrogative:
Pronoun Interrogative
=====================
====================
Summary
-------
An interrogative pronoun is a pronoun that appears at the beginning of a clause/sentence and indicates that the clause/sentence
is an interrogative question rather than an indicative statement.
.. include:: includes/pronoun_interrogative-summary.rst
Article
-------
In Biblical Hebrew, a family of :ref:`interrogative particles<particle_interrogative>` function as interrogative pronouns,
and many scholars use the terms "interrogative pronouns" and "interrogative particles" interchangeably. The two most common
interrogative particles are מִי (personal interrogative pronoun, referring to a person) and מָה (impersonal interrogative pronoun,
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they appear in the middle of a clause/sentence rather than at the beginning. As a general rule, the particles מִי or מָה function
as interrogative pronouns when they appear at the beginning of a clause/sentence, and function as indefinite pronouns when they
appear in the middle of a sentence or clause. However, this is not a universal rule; the specific use of these pronouns must
always be determined from the context.
always be determined from the context.

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:github_url: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/src/branch/master/content/pronoun_personal.rst
.. _pronoun_personal:
Pronoun Personal
================
Summary
-------
In Biblical Hebrew, a personal pronoun is a word that indirectly refers to a particular person(s) or thing(s). In English, the
following words are personal pronouns: "I", "we", "you", "he", "she", "they", "them".
.. include:: includes/pronoun_personal-summary.rst
Article
-------
In Biblical Hebrew, personal pronouns change form according to gender (:ref:`masculine<gender_masculine>`, number
(:ref:`feminine<gender_feminine>`, and person (:ref:`first<person_first>`, :ref:`second<person_second>`, or
:ref:`third<person_third>`. Grammatically they are very similar to :ref:`pronominal suffixes<suffix_pronominal>`, but they

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:github_url: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/src/branch/master/content/pronoun_relative.rst
.. _pronoun_relative:
Pronoun Relative
================
Summary
-------
Relative pronouns are pronouns which function as a relative particle, that is, to introduce a phrase or clause that describes a noun.
Article
-------
Either term is correct. In English, the relative pronouns include: “who", "what", “that", “which", "when", or "where".
In most cases, Biblical Hebrew simply uses either the :ref:`relative particle<particle_relative>` אֲשֶׁר or the prefix -שֶׁ to
introduce a relative clause. However, in rare instances Biblical Hebrew uses certain other pronouns to serve this same function.