Research Catalog
The Syriac Dot : a short history / George Anton Kiraz.
- Title
- The Syriac Dot : a short history / George Anton Kiraz.
- Author
- Kiraz, George Anton
- Publication
- Piscataway, NJ : Gorgias Press, 2015.
Items in the Library & Off-site
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1 Item
Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Not available - Please for assistance. | Text | Request in advance | PJ5432 .K57 2015 | Off-site |
Details
- Description
- xv, 208 pages : color illustrations; 19 cm
- Summary
- "The diacritical point in Syriac is confusing at best. All students are aware of the dots on letters like resh and daleth the same way English readers are aware of the dots on letters like i and j, but most people do not know why they are there. In his new book, Dr. Kiraz peels back the story of the dot layer by layer to discover its origin and use in Syriac orthography. Beginning with dots on resh and daleth, the book moves on to the development of plural dots, and then examines the use of dots to distinguish between homographs and the rationale behind dot placement. Kiraz conducts experiments with modern scribes to construct a theory of the origin of the dot. He also discusses the development of the dot to mark hard and soft consonants, and later, silent letters. From these early uses, dots became an increasingly important part of Syriac writing. Kiraz traces the beginnings of using dots to mark gender and tense, as well as increasingly sophisticated sounds, to the dot's role in signifying vowels, vowel sequence, accents, and punctuation marks. Finally, the book examines the dot in the medieval and modern periods, providing some insight into the role of dots when producing Syriac and garshuni manuscripts."--
- Subject
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 179-186) and indexes.
- Language (note)
- English and Syriac.
- Contents
- Script and transcription -- The first single dot -- The first double dot -- The power of the single dot -- An intelligent dot -- The Kenoro dotless experiment -- The silent dot -- The Shifting dot -- A suffix dot -- Tagging dots -- Red dots -- A pair of dots -- Vowel dots -- Punctuation dots -- Reading dots -- The net of dots -- Ooops dots -- Garshunography dots -- Dots today -- Epilogue -- Appendix 1; Script guide -- Appendix 2: KDE data -- Appendix 3: Chronology of events -- Appendix 4: Manuscripts consulted -- Plates -- Appendix 5: Comments on plates.
- ISBN
- 9781463204259
- 1463204256
- LCCN
- ^^2015002578
- OCLC
- 899226515
- SCSB-12446924
- Owning Institutions
- Harvard Library