Israelian Hebrew
Israelian Hebrew is a northern dialect of biblical Hebrew proposed as an explanation for various irregular linguistic features of the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible. It competes with the alternative explanation that such features are Aramaisms, indicative either of late dates of composition, or of editorial emendations. Although IH is not a new proposal, it only started gaining ground as a challenge to older arguments to late dates for some biblical texts since about a decade before the turn of the 21st century: linguistic variation in the Hebrew Bible might be better explained by synchronic rather than diachronic linguistics, meaning various biblical texts could be significantly older than many 20th century scholars supposed.
What constitutes linguistic irregularity in the MT is not in dispute, nor is the affinity of many these features to aspects of Aramaic. What distinguishes the theories is a historical question of language contact. It is known that the Kingdom of Judah, suffered a defeat at the hands of the Aramaic speaking neo-Babylonian Empire, which involved deportation according to standard Babylonian practice. This language contact is recognised by all scholars, as are the resultant Aramaisms in late Biblical Hebrew. What the IH proposal explains, which LBH does not, is the Aramaisms that appear in texts that many scholars would consider antedated the period of exile in Babylon. The two theories are thus not incompatible, which is why they co-existed throughout the 20th century. However, the more recent work does pose a challenge to the traditional dating of some specific texts in the Bible, the Song of Songs in particular.
Phonology
The reconstruction of IH proposes that diachronic phonetic shifts in ancient Israelite dialects varied geographically, with northern shifts attesting a number of isoglosses with Aramaic and other northwest Semitic languages.ṯ̣">Ẓāʾ">ṯ̣ > ṣ">Tsade">ṣ or ṯ̣ > ṭ">Teth">ṭ
The assumed proto-Semitic phoneme ṯ̣ shifts to ṣ in standard biblical Hebrew, but to ṭ in Aramaic. So original proto-Semitic nṯ̣r becomes nṣr in SBH, but nṭr in Aramaic. However, the form nṭr is found in several places in the Bible—in Leviticus 19:18, Jeremiah 3:5,12, Nahum 1:2 and Psalm 103:9—though it has the sense "be angry" in these places. Brown–Driver–Briggs and the Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament treat nṭr as a coinage derivative from nṯ̣r—hence "keep one's anger"— though Ludwig Koehler and Walter Baumgartner's earlier lexicon took a different approach. Irrespective of whether or not SBH coined this root to convey the sense of "be angry", the Bible also attests the use of nṭr in exactly the same sense as the proto-Semitic word nṯ̣r. The question is, is this latter data evidence of early assimilation of Aramaic in the north, or alternatively of late composition or editorial emendation, after Imperial Aramaic started to replace SBH in post-exilic Kingdom of Judah in the south?ṣ́">Ḍād">ṣ́ > ṣ or ṣ́ > q">Qoph">q > ʕ">Ayin">ʕ
ṯ">Ṯāʾ">ṯ > š">Shin (letter)">š or ṯ > t">Taw">t
ḏ">Ḏāl">ḏ > z">Zayin">z or ḏ > d">Dalet">d
Morphology
Various irregularities in the morphology of words attested in BH also show affinities with languages neighbouring ancient Israel to the north.Relative pronoun
The relative pronoun in SBH is asher, and in Mishnaic Hebrew is sh–. LBH appears to represent a transition stage: the latter form appears, but inconsistently. The Song of Songs is unusual in that it uses –ש consistently, with the sole exception of its first verse, which functions as a title. The Phoenician and Ammonite cognate is אש.Independent pronoun
The irregular second-person feminine singular independent pronoun אתי appears as the Ketiv in several IH texts including Judges 17:2, 1 Kings 14:2, and 2 Kings 4:16, 4:23, 8:1.''Nomina actionis''
of verbs by forming a feminine nomen actionis is common in MH, but rare in SBH.Syntax
Double plural
Biblical Hebrew utilises the construct state, typical of many Afroasiatic and especially Semitic languages, to indicate a genitive case relationship between nouns. In simple two-noun examples, the first noun is cast in the phonetically abbreviated construct state, while the second—more generally, the final—noun occurs in its phonetically full form, known as the status absolutus.In SBH, the plural–singular distinction between nouns is still apparent, whether they are cast in absolute or construct form. However, there are a number of cases in the Hebrew Bible where the plural form of either the nomen regens or rectum is adopted to echo its partner, irrespective of whether it is intended to denote a singular referent. A clear example comes from 2 Kings 15:25, where the form of the toponymic nomen rectum Gilead is plural in the construction bənē Gilʿādim, but clearly means "the sons of Gilead", not "*the sons of Gileads". An example of the same phrase as bənē Gilʿād can be found in Numbers 26:30, without the masculine plural suffix –im added to the place name Gilʿād.
Periphrastic genitive
A periphrastic genitive is utilized in MH, Aramaic, and Akkadian of the Amurru kingdom to convey an intensity regarding possession, but it is only used once in the Bible—in Song of Songs 3:7 "Solomons divan".Deponent participle
There are two and only two instances of a deponent participle in the Hebrew Bible: nəḥittim and . Song 3:8 survives in the Qumran fragment 4QCantc. This grammatical device is common in Mishnaic Hebrew and Syriac, which are relatively late languages, but the contexts could also suggest northern settings, influencing the phraseology.Demonstrative pronoun
The variant feminine singular demonstrative pronoun rtl=yes is found in 2 Kings 6:19, Hosea 7:16, Psalm 132:12, and six times in the book of Ecclesiastes. All of these are IH texts, making this variant demonstrative pronoun a peculiarity of the Israelian Hebrew dialect.Lexicon
A number of words have uneven distribution in the MT of the Hebrew Bible, if the indicators above are used to identify which portions may have Israelite provenance. In many cases, these words are also attested in the languages of ancient Israel's northern neighbours, like Ugarit, Phoenicia and Aram.One of the clearest cases is the use of the word nʕm in contrast to the word ṭb. In Ugaritic, as in SBH, both nʕm and ṭb are used to convey the idea goodness. In Phoenician, nʕm is the only attested word for "good". It is also common in personal names: Adonis is called נעמן in Phoenician. Likewise, we know of the Aramaic name Naaman, from the general of that name mentioned in 2 Kings 5. Close inspection of the MT reveals that 22 to 26 of the thirty uses of נעם can be associated with the north.