Appendix:Hebrew parts of speech

This appendix is about the parts of speech of the Hebrew language.

Lemmata
This dictionary follows the longstanding tradition of using the following forms as lemmata (citation forms):


 * for common nouns: the singular indefinite form
 * for adjectives: the masculine singular indefinite form
 * for pronouns: the standalone (subject) form
 * for prepositions: the non-pronoun-including form

That is, these are the forms for which full definitions are provided; other forms are described by reference to a lemma, such as "." (for ). For instructions on controlling the appearance of such descriptions, see Category:Form-of templates.

Declension
Hebrew nouns, adjectives, and personal pronouns all undergo declension (noun-paradigm inflection); and, due to the peculiar way that personal pronouns decline, prepositions do as well.

Gender
Each noun and pronoun has a specific gender, either masculine or feminine, and each adjective has two sets of forms, one for modifying masculine nouns and pronouns one for modifying feminine ones.

Nouns referring to humans and certain kinds of animals generally come in pairs, one masculine noun for referring to males and one feminine noun for referring to females.

Number
Hebrew generally has two grammatical numbers, singular (used with a single referent) and plural (used with multiple referents). Additionally, nouns have a dual number, which is a special case of the plural that is used with two referents; but most nouns' dual-number forms are exceedingly rare. Also, while a singular or plural form can be used with a cardinal number (for example, "time- SINGULAR one- FEMININE ", i.e. "once";  "three- FEMININE time- PLURAL ", i.e. "three times"), a dual form cannot be; it is equivalent to the plural with the cardinal number "two" (so, for example,  "time- DUAL ", i.e. "twice", is exactly synonymous with  "time- PLURAL two- FEMININE ", i.e. "two times"). One major exception is that for some nouns, mostly nouns referring to various body parts, what is structurally (and was presumably originally) their dual form is used as their ordinary plural form, eliminating the dual–plural distinction in these nouns.

Hebrew adjectives and verbs agree with their subjects, and personal pronouns with their antecedents, in number, but these only distinguish between singular and plural; nouns in the dual form require plural agreement.

State
Hebrew common nouns have three "states": indefinite, analogous to English a/an plus a noun; definite, analogous to English the plus a noun; and construct, somewhat analogous to English 's plus a following noun, but is followed rather than preceded by its possessor. For example, consider the noun "house". Its singular indefinite form means "a house"; its singular definite form  means "the house"; and its singular construct form  means "a house of" or "the house of". (Definiteness of a construct noun is often marked on the following noun; for example,, literally "house- CONSTRUCT book- INDEFINITE ", means "school", while , literally "house- CONSTRUCT book- DEFINITE " means "the school". This is not always possible, however; "son- CONSTRUCT me", i.e. "my son", can mean either "one of my sons" or "my only son".) A definite form is formed very regularly from the corresponding indefinite form by using the clitic  "the"; construct forms are less consistent, however, sometimes being identical to the corresponding indefinite forms and other times showing changes in vowels, endings, or both.

Hebrew adjectives also have three states, indefinite, definite, and construct. The construct forms are rare. The definite forms are formed from the corresponding indefinite forms by using the clitic "the"; hence, in Hebrew, "the big house" would be, literally "house- DEFINITE big- DEFINITE ". The definiteness of an adjective can be determined separately from that of the noun it modifies; that is, a semantically definite noun that is not itself marked for definiteness (say, because it is a proper noun, and hence inherently definite) will nonetheless be modified by adjectives in the definite form. The constructness of an adjective is independent of that of the noun it modifies and indicates that the adjective is modified by the following noun, e.g..

Masculine noun without internal changes
The word does not go through any stem-internal changes:

Masculine noun with internal changes
The word goes through stem-internal changes throughout the declension:

Feminine noun without internal changes
The word does not go through any stem-internal changes:

Feminine noun with internal changes
The word goes through stem-internal changes throughout the declension: