Difference between revisions of "Language/Hebrew/Grammar/Personal-pronouns-and-the-present-tense"

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<div style="font-size:300%;">Personal pronouns and the present tense</div>
<div style="font-size:300%;">Personal pronouns and the present tense</div>
Hebrew is not a language like any other. 


We will show that grammar (דִקְדוּק) has simple conjugation modes adapted to the Hebrew genius.
The present, defined as the period between the end of the past and the beginning of the future, is only a perpetual moment.


Time (human) flows in one direction only, and Western thought has arbitrarily divided time into past, present, and future absolute, whereas there are only aspects of time that express thought itself of the creator, and which must be considered as differentiated relations with the One who is out of time.
Actually, there is no real present time in the Hebrew language.  
 
The present, defined as the period between the end of the past and the beginning of the future, is only a perpetual moment. Only Haqadoch baroukh Hou is an Eternal Present, and apart from Him, Creation has no existence. Therefore, there is no present time in the Hebrew language.  


==Personal pronouns==
==Personal pronouns==


We will show in the next lessons that the Hebrew personal pronouns are given as suffixes for the so-called completed time, and as prefixes for the so-called unfinished time.
The Hebrew personal pronouns are given as suffixes for the so-called completed time, and as prefixes for the so-called unfinished time.


"Whole" personal pronouns are used to make the appearance of the present.
"Whole" personal pronouns are used to make the appearance of the present.

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