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In this encyclopedic text, completely revised and updated in this second edition, Joshua R. Jacobson presents the history of the ancient Jewish tradition of chanting the Bible and a comprehensive explanation of cantillation practice with its grammatical rules and regional variations. His unique step-by-step system of analysis shows how chanting dramatizes and interprets the meaning of the biblical text. Jacobson also provides complete notation for performing all six musical systems, an extensive guide to pronouncing biblical Hebrew, and pedagogical tips for cantillation teachers. Chanting the…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: The Jewish Publication Society
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780827613324
- Artikelnr.: 48404102
- Verlag: The Jewish Publication Society
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780827613324
- Artikelnr.: 48404102
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
a The Secondary Dichotomy: Tippe
a Three Independent Clauses The Simple Sentence The Nominal Clause Chapter 2.4 Conjunctives Recursive Dichotomy Disjunctives and Conjunctives within a Segment Merekha – The “Servant” of Siluk Merekha – The “Servant” of Tippe
a Merekha Khefulah Munä Conjunctives and Dagesh Kal The “Conjunctive Soft” Form Chapter 2.5 Substitutions Tippe
a Substituting for a Conjunctive One-Word Clauses in Level One Two Te‘amim on a Long Word Mayela and Siluk on a Single Word Mayela and Etnäta on a Single Word Munä and Etnäta on a Single Word Merekha and Tippe
a on a Single Word Two Munäs: A Double Conjunctive Chapter 2.6 Level Two: Zakef Stepping Segments Stepping Segments and Nesting Segments The Four Forms of Zakef Munä—The Conjunctive Serving Zakef Katon A New Model Another Upgrade Review: Three Models of Dichotomy Review Verb in Second Position The Word
The Vocative Case Chapter 2.7 Level Two: Segol When Does Segol Appear? Munä—The Conjunctive Serving Segol. Shalshelet as a Substitute for Segol Pasek The Seven Occurences of Shalshelet Rabbinic Exegesis of Shalshelet Chapter 2.8 Tevir The Disjunctive Tevir Examples of Tevir Relative Cadences: Tippe
a and Tevir Upgrading: Tevir Substituting for Merekha The Conjunctives of Tevir: Darga and Merekha A New Model Verb In Terminal Position Chapter 2.9 The Remote Conjunctives of Tevir Kadma And Munä: The Secondary Conjunctives of Tevir Verb in the Middle — Part Two Secondary Accents Merekha Khefulah and Darga: Two Conjunctives before Tippe
a More than One Remote Conjunctive Three or More Conjunctives Chapter 2.10 Revia‘ Upgrade: Tevir to Revia‘ The Dichotomy of Lists Revia‘ Analysis Three Level-Three “Stepping” Segments Darga—The Remote Conjunctive Of Revia‘ Three Conjunctives before Revia‘ Chapter 2.11 Pashta The Disjunctive Pashta Pashta and Kadma Yetiv—A Substitute for Pashta Munä Upgraded to Pashta or Yetiv The Meteg as Lengthener Substitutions and the Conjunctive-Rafeh Rule Verses with No Conjunctives The Conjunctives of Pashta—Mahpakh and Merekha Derivation of the Name “Mahpakh” Mahpakh and Pashta on The Same Word Mahpakh and Yetiv The Retracted Accent—Nasog A
or The Remote Conjunctives of Pashta—Kadma or Munä The Third and Fourth Remote Conjunctives of Pashta Revia‘—The Initial Level-Three Disjunctive before Pashta Upgrading Pashta to Revia‘ Chapter 2.12 Zarka Zarka The Conjunctives of Zarka Upgrading Munä-Segol to Zarka-Segol Upgrading for Long Words The Remote Conjunctives of Zarka—Kadma or Munä Munä Instead of Kadma Three Conjunctives before Zarka Four Conjunctives before Zarka Two Subdivisions under Segol Three Subdivisions under Segol Chapter 2.13 Level Four: Geresh Simple Verses and Complex Verses Subdividing a Level-Three Segment Geresh and Double Geresh The Forms of Geresh Geresh without a Conjunctive Upgrading for Long Words The Conjunctives of Geresh—Kadma and Munä The Remote Conjunctive of Geresh—Telishah Ketanah Munä—The Conjunctive before Telishah Ketanah To Geresh or Not to Geresh? The Geresh Segment In Context Chapter 2.14 Level Four: Legarmeh The Disjunctive Legarmeh Legarmeh or Geresh? The 2+1 Division and Exceptions to the Rule Stepping Level-Four Segments The Conjunctive of Legarmeh—Merekha Three or More Stepping Segments Analysis of Complete Verses Chapter 2.15 Level Four: Pazer The Distribution of Level-Four Terminators The Disjunctive Pazer (Katan) The Conjunctive of Pazer—Munä Level-Four Segments Three Stepping Segments The Pazer Segment in Context Lists Level Five Chapter 2.16 Level Four: Pazer Gadol The Disjunctive Pazer Gadol (Karney-Farah) The Conjunctive of Pazer Gadol—Galgal (Yerä-Ben-Yomo) The Pazer Gadol Clause in Context Chapter 2.17 Telishah Gedolah The Disjunctive Telishah Gedolah Telishah Gedolah as a Substitute for Geresh Telishah Gedolah and Geresh on the Same Word Telishah Gedolah as a Substitute for Pazer Telishah Gedolah as a Level-Five Terminator Telishah Gedolah as a Substitute for Telishah Ketanah The Telishah Gedolah Clause in Context Chapter 3 Pronunciation The Importance of Correct Pronunciation Halakhic Evidence The Evolution of the Hebrew Language An Official Hebrew Diction The “Elevated” Style About this Guide Consonant “Voicing” The Pronunciation of
The Pronunciation of
and
The Pronunciation of
Other Differences Run-on Words Vowel Length Pure Vowels Consistent Pronunciation Doubled Consonants Becoming Familiar with Dagesh
azak Mappik The Function of Mappik The Sound of Mappik Shin and Sin Matres Lectionis—
Syllables Open Syllables Closed Syllables Dagesh Kal The Conjunctive Soft Form Consonant Endings
Dagesh
azak in
Vocal Sheva (Sheva Na‘) Intermediate Sheva (Sheva Meräef) Summary: Prefix Chart Kamats Forms Kamats before De
ik Two Approaches to the Rules of Pronunciation Furtive Patä (Patä Genuvah)
And as Consonants Some Words Are Not Pronounced as They Are Written Syllabic Stress: Millera‘ and Mille‘el Marking the Accent The Secondary Accent Syllabic Rhythm Makkef Vowel Length Reduction in Connected Words Special Te‘amim for Contiguous Accents Retraction
Secondary Stress Observations on Secondary Stress The Euphonic Meteg
Meteg Summary The Pausal Form
Vowel Changes in Pausal Form Change Of Stress in the Hiatus Form Change Of Stress in Vav Conversive The Directional (or “Locative”) Suffix
Suffixes and Syllabic Stress Rare Words that Begin with Dagesh
azak (
) Pronunciation of the Conjunctive Dagesh The Vocalization of Prefixes The Definite Article
Prepositional Prefixes
The Word
The Interrogative Prefix
Vav Conjunctive
Vav Conversive
The Prepositional Prefixes
The Prepositional Prefix
Formal Classical Pronunciation versus Colloquial Modern Pronunciation General Pronunciation Exercises Chapter 4 Canon And Masorah A History of the Scrolls The Aniquity of Cantillation Where Do the Melodies Come From? The Chanting of Scripture Did Tiberian Notation Represent an Ancient Tradition? The Septuagint Other Ancient Greek Manuscripts Evidence in the Talmud Other Systems of Punctuation The Musical Realization of the Tiberian System The Notation Systems The Tiberian Codices The Aleppo Codex Other Ancient Codices Chapter and Verse Printed Bibles The Soferim and the Consonantal Text Masoretic Annotations and Lists Chapter 5.1 The Te‘amim Disjunctives Conjunctives Other Signs Remote Conjunctives Invariables Upgrading in a Two-Word Domain Upgrading in the Presence of Long Words Substitutions for Musical Considerations Frequency Chart Repeating Te‘amim The Hierarchy of the Te'amim The Twenty-One Books and the Three Books The Poetic Books: Psalms, Proverbs and Job Chapter 5.2 Two Te‘amim on a Single Word Primary and Secondary Accents Meteg The Euphonic Meteg Double Conjunctives Double Disjunctives Doubled Invariables Postpositives Prepositives High and Low Accents: Two Traditions The Decalogue The Saga Of Reuben Chapter 5.3 Troubleshooting Commonly Confused Te‘amim Errors in Rhythm Commonly Mispronounced Consonants Commonly Mispronounced Vowels Incorrect Syllabic Stress Biblical Hebrew and Contemporary Hebrew The Last Word Chapter 5.4 Parsing The Hebrew Bible Some Definitions Overview—The Steps Involved in Parsing Identify the Verbs Parallelism—Pairs of Clauses The Verbless (Nominal) Clause Coordinated Verbs More than Two Independent Clauses The Subordinate Clause Downgrading the Time Stamp Inverted Downgrade Quotations Linked Word Pairs Inconsistency of Style Construct (
) Followed by a Linked Pair Particles Other Words The Word
Lists Emphatic Words The Verb and its Complements Puzzling Punctuation The Limits of Predictability Chapter 5.5 The Pedagogy of Cantillation The Cantillation Class Applying the Paradigm to the Student’s Portion Flash Cards Dictation Listening Activities Teaching Inflection Applying the Melodies to Familiar Words Reinforcing the Patterns Suggestions for Self-Study Preparing to Read from a Scroll Chapter 6.1 Interpreting the Te‘amim Music of the People The Liquid Tradition Becomes Frozen One Tradition among Many Music Serves the Text Transcription of the Te‘amim Rhythmic Notation Pitch Notation The Names of the Te‘amim Syllabic Stress Improvisation Smoothing Redistribution Compensation Pick-Up Pitch Adjustment The Rhythm of Cantillation Reading Complete Phrases High and Low Te‘amim Chapter 6.2 Torah Historical Development of the Public Reading Contemporary Practices in Traditional Synagogues The Cycle of Readings The Combined Pericope
The Division of the Pericope Extra Aliyot The Number of Olim The Number of Verses The Maftir Sim
at Torah Customs Procedures Related to the Torah Reading The Correct Reading of the Torah Qualifications for the Ba‘al Keri’ah Correcting An Error In The Reading A Defect in the Scroll Tokhe
ot Remembering Amalek Ta‘amey Ha-‘Elyon Other Special Customs The Melodies of the Cantillation Motifs The Siluk and Etnäta Segments The Zakef Segment The Tevir Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol/Shalshelet Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Telishah Gedolah Pazer Munä Galgal Pazer-Gadol The Final Cadence Special Melodies Akdamut Millin Chanting the Torah Blessings The Kaddish Summary of the Te‘amim The Scale of the Torah Cantillation The Te‘amim according to Abraham Binder Chapter 6.3 Haftarah Contemporary Traditional Practice Historical Development of the Haftarah Customs Etymology Haftarah Chart The Melodies of the Cantillation Motifs The Siluk and Etnäta Segments The Zakef Segment The Tevir Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Other Segments The Final Cadence Modulations to the Lamentation Mode Blessings Yatsiv Pitgam Summary of the Te‘amim Chapter 6.4 The Festival Megillot: Song Of Songs, Ruth, and Ecclesiastes The Contemporary Practicea nd its Roots The Song of Songs Ruth Ecclesiastes The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Merekha Siluk Etnäta Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Gereshayim Telishah Gedolah Pazer The Final Cadence Blessings Summary of the Te‘amim Chapter 6.5 Esther The Contemporary Practice and its Roots The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Telishah Gedolah Pazer Munä Galgal Pazer-Gadol The Final Cadence The Invitational Cadence Lamentation Verses Exceptional Verses Blessings Shoshannat Ya‘akov Summary of the Te’amim The Scale of the Te‘amim The Axes of the Te‘amim Chapter 6.6 Lamentations (Ekhah) Structure Liturgical Use Lamentations Motifs in other Readings Chanting Chapter Three The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Other Final Cadences Summary of the Te‘amim The Scale of the Cantillation Chapter 6.7 Torah for the High Holiday Morning Service The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Telishah Gedolah Pazer The Final Cadence Chanting the Blessings Kaddish Summary of the Te‘amim The Scale of the Te‘amim Chapter 7.1 Comparison Chart Chapter 7.2 The Ideal Reader Chapter 7.3 Guide to the Readings Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy Special Torah Readings Sim
at Torah Public Fast Days Rosh
odesh Shavuot High Holidays Haftarot Genesis — Haftarot Exodus — Haftarot Leviticus — Haftarot Numbers — Haftarot Deuteronomy — Haftarot Special Haftarot Ruth Song of Songs Ecclesiastes (Kohelet) Lamentations Esther Chapter 7.4 Glossary Bibliography Index
a The Secondary Dichotomy: Tippe
a Three Independent Clauses The Simple Sentence The Nominal Clause Chapter 2.4 Conjunctives Recursive Dichotomy Disjunctives and Conjunctives within a Segment Merekha – The “Servant” of Siluk Merekha – The “Servant” of Tippe
a Merekha Khefulah Munä Conjunctives and Dagesh Kal The “Conjunctive Soft” Form Chapter 2.5 Substitutions Tippe
a Substituting for a Conjunctive One-Word Clauses in Level One Two Te‘amim on a Long Word Mayela and Siluk on a Single Word Mayela and Etnäta on a Single Word Munä and Etnäta on a Single Word Merekha and Tippe
a on a Single Word Two Munäs: A Double Conjunctive Chapter 2.6 Level Two: Zakef Stepping Segments Stepping Segments and Nesting Segments The Four Forms of Zakef Munä—The Conjunctive Serving Zakef Katon A New Model Another Upgrade Review: Three Models of Dichotomy Review Verb in Second Position The Word
The Vocative Case Chapter 2.7 Level Two: Segol When Does Segol Appear? Munä—The Conjunctive Serving Segol. Shalshelet as a Substitute for Segol Pasek The Seven Occurences of Shalshelet Rabbinic Exegesis of Shalshelet Chapter 2.8 Tevir The Disjunctive Tevir Examples of Tevir Relative Cadences: Tippe
a and Tevir Upgrading: Tevir Substituting for Merekha The Conjunctives of Tevir: Darga and Merekha A New Model Verb In Terminal Position Chapter 2.9 The Remote Conjunctives of Tevir Kadma And Munä: The Secondary Conjunctives of Tevir Verb in the Middle — Part Two Secondary Accents Merekha Khefulah and Darga: Two Conjunctives before Tippe
a More than One Remote Conjunctive Three or More Conjunctives Chapter 2.10 Revia‘ Upgrade: Tevir to Revia‘ The Dichotomy of Lists Revia‘ Analysis Three Level-Three “Stepping” Segments Darga—The Remote Conjunctive Of Revia‘ Three Conjunctives before Revia‘ Chapter 2.11 Pashta The Disjunctive Pashta Pashta and Kadma Yetiv—A Substitute for Pashta Munä Upgraded to Pashta or Yetiv The Meteg as Lengthener Substitutions and the Conjunctive-Rafeh Rule Verses with No Conjunctives The Conjunctives of Pashta—Mahpakh and Merekha Derivation of the Name “Mahpakh” Mahpakh and Pashta on The Same Word Mahpakh and Yetiv The Retracted Accent—Nasog A
or The Remote Conjunctives of Pashta—Kadma or Munä The Third and Fourth Remote Conjunctives of Pashta Revia‘—The Initial Level-Three Disjunctive before Pashta Upgrading Pashta to Revia‘ Chapter 2.12 Zarka Zarka The Conjunctives of Zarka Upgrading Munä-Segol to Zarka-Segol Upgrading for Long Words The Remote Conjunctives of Zarka—Kadma or Munä Munä Instead of Kadma Three Conjunctives before Zarka Four Conjunctives before Zarka Two Subdivisions under Segol Three Subdivisions under Segol Chapter 2.13 Level Four: Geresh Simple Verses and Complex Verses Subdividing a Level-Three Segment Geresh and Double Geresh The Forms of Geresh Geresh without a Conjunctive Upgrading for Long Words The Conjunctives of Geresh—Kadma and Munä The Remote Conjunctive of Geresh—Telishah Ketanah Munä—The Conjunctive before Telishah Ketanah To Geresh or Not to Geresh? The Geresh Segment In Context Chapter 2.14 Level Four: Legarmeh The Disjunctive Legarmeh Legarmeh or Geresh? The 2+1 Division and Exceptions to the Rule Stepping Level-Four Segments The Conjunctive of Legarmeh—Merekha Three or More Stepping Segments Analysis of Complete Verses Chapter 2.15 Level Four: Pazer The Distribution of Level-Four Terminators The Disjunctive Pazer (Katan) The Conjunctive of Pazer—Munä Level-Four Segments Three Stepping Segments The Pazer Segment in Context Lists Level Five Chapter 2.16 Level Four: Pazer Gadol The Disjunctive Pazer Gadol (Karney-Farah) The Conjunctive of Pazer Gadol—Galgal (Yerä-Ben-Yomo) The Pazer Gadol Clause in Context Chapter 2.17 Telishah Gedolah The Disjunctive Telishah Gedolah Telishah Gedolah as a Substitute for Geresh Telishah Gedolah and Geresh on the Same Word Telishah Gedolah as a Substitute for Pazer Telishah Gedolah as a Level-Five Terminator Telishah Gedolah as a Substitute for Telishah Ketanah The Telishah Gedolah Clause in Context Chapter 3 Pronunciation The Importance of Correct Pronunciation Halakhic Evidence The Evolution of the Hebrew Language An Official Hebrew Diction The “Elevated” Style About this Guide Consonant “Voicing” The Pronunciation of
The Pronunciation of
and
The Pronunciation of
Other Differences Run-on Words Vowel Length Pure Vowels Consistent Pronunciation Doubled Consonants Becoming Familiar with Dagesh
azak Mappik The Function of Mappik The Sound of Mappik Shin and Sin Matres Lectionis—
Syllables Open Syllables Closed Syllables Dagesh Kal The Conjunctive Soft Form Consonant Endings
Dagesh
azak in
Vocal Sheva (Sheva Na‘) Intermediate Sheva (Sheva Meräef) Summary: Prefix Chart Kamats Forms Kamats before De
ik Two Approaches to the Rules of Pronunciation Furtive Patä (Patä Genuvah)
And as Consonants Some Words Are Not Pronounced as They Are Written Syllabic Stress: Millera‘ and Mille‘el Marking the Accent The Secondary Accent Syllabic Rhythm Makkef Vowel Length Reduction in Connected Words Special Te‘amim for Contiguous Accents Retraction
Secondary Stress Observations on Secondary Stress The Euphonic Meteg
Meteg Summary The Pausal Form
Vowel Changes in Pausal Form Change Of Stress in the Hiatus Form Change Of Stress in Vav Conversive The Directional (or “Locative”) Suffix
Suffixes and Syllabic Stress Rare Words that Begin with Dagesh
azak (
) Pronunciation of the Conjunctive Dagesh The Vocalization of Prefixes The Definite Article
Prepositional Prefixes
The Word
The Interrogative Prefix
Vav Conjunctive
Vav Conversive
The Prepositional Prefixes
The Prepositional Prefix
Formal Classical Pronunciation versus Colloquial Modern Pronunciation General Pronunciation Exercises Chapter 4 Canon And Masorah A History of the Scrolls The Aniquity of Cantillation Where Do the Melodies Come From? The Chanting of Scripture Did Tiberian Notation Represent an Ancient Tradition? The Septuagint Other Ancient Greek Manuscripts Evidence in the Talmud Other Systems of Punctuation The Musical Realization of the Tiberian System The Notation Systems The Tiberian Codices The Aleppo Codex Other Ancient Codices Chapter and Verse Printed Bibles The Soferim and the Consonantal Text Masoretic Annotations and Lists Chapter 5.1 The Te‘amim Disjunctives Conjunctives Other Signs Remote Conjunctives Invariables Upgrading in a Two-Word Domain Upgrading in the Presence of Long Words Substitutions for Musical Considerations Frequency Chart Repeating Te‘amim The Hierarchy of the Te'amim The Twenty-One Books and the Three Books The Poetic Books: Psalms, Proverbs and Job Chapter 5.2 Two Te‘amim on a Single Word Primary and Secondary Accents Meteg The Euphonic Meteg Double Conjunctives Double Disjunctives Doubled Invariables Postpositives Prepositives High and Low Accents: Two Traditions The Decalogue The Saga Of Reuben Chapter 5.3 Troubleshooting Commonly Confused Te‘amim Errors in Rhythm Commonly Mispronounced Consonants Commonly Mispronounced Vowels Incorrect Syllabic Stress Biblical Hebrew and Contemporary Hebrew The Last Word Chapter 5.4 Parsing The Hebrew Bible Some Definitions Overview—The Steps Involved in Parsing Identify the Verbs Parallelism—Pairs of Clauses The Verbless (Nominal) Clause Coordinated Verbs More than Two Independent Clauses The Subordinate Clause Downgrading the Time Stamp Inverted Downgrade Quotations Linked Word Pairs Inconsistency of Style Construct (
) Followed by a Linked Pair Particles Other Words The Word
Lists Emphatic Words The Verb and its Complements Puzzling Punctuation The Limits of Predictability Chapter 5.5 The Pedagogy of Cantillation The Cantillation Class Applying the Paradigm to the Student’s Portion Flash Cards Dictation Listening Activities Teaching Inflection Applying the Melodies to Familiar Words Reinforcing the Patterns Suggestions for Self-Study Preparing to Read from a Scroll Chapter 6.1 Interpreting the Te‘amim Music of the People The Liquid Tradition Becomes Frozen One Tradition among Many Music Serves the Text Transcription of the Te‘amim Rhythmic Notation Pitch Notation The Names of the Te‘amim Syllabic Stress Improvisation Smoothing Redistribution Compensation Pick-Up Pitch Adjustment The Rhythm of Cantillation Reading Complete Phrases High and Low Te‘amim Chapter 6.2 Torah Historical Development of the Public Reading Contemporary Practices in Traditional Synagogues The Cycle of Readings The Combined Pericope
The Division of the Pericope Extra Aliyot The Number of Olim The Number of Verses The Maftir Sim
at Torah Customs Procedures Related to the Torah Reading The Correct Reading of the Torah Qualifications for the Ba‘al Keri’ah Correcting An Error In The Reading A Defect in the Scroll Tokhe
ot Remembering Amalek Ta‘amey Ha-‘Elyon Other Special Customs The Melodies of the Cantillation Motifs The Siluk and Etnäta Segments The Zakef Segment The Tevir Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol/Shalshelet Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Telishah Gedolah Pazer Munä Galgal Pazer-Gadol The Final Cadence Special Melodies Akdamut Millin Chanting the Torah Blessings The Kaddish Summary of the Te‘amim The Scale of the Torah Cantillation The Te‘amim according to Abraham Binder Chapter 6.3 Haftarah Contemporary Traditional Practice Historical Development of the Haftarah Customs Etymology Haftarah Chart The Melodies of the Cantillation Motifs The Siluk and Etnäta Segments The Zakef Segment The Tevir Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Other Segments The Final Cadence Modulations to the Lamentation Mode Blessings Yatsiv Pitgam Summary of the Te‘amim Chapter 6.4 The Festival Megillot: Song Of Songs, Ruth, and Ecclesiastes The Contemporary Practicea nd its Roots The Song of Songs Ruth Ecclesiastes The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Merekha Siluk Etnäta Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Gereshayim Telishah Gedolah Pazer The Final Cadence Blessings Summary of the Te‘amim Chapter 6.5 Esther The Contemporary Practice and its Roots The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Telishah Gedolah Pazer Munä Galgal Pazer-Gadol The Final Cadence The Invitational Cadence Lamentation Verses Exceptional Verses Blessings Shoshannat Ya‘akov Summary of the Te’amim The Scale of the Te‘amim The Axes of the Te‘amim Chapter 6.6 Lamentations (Ekhah) Structure Liturgical Use Lamentations Motifs in other Readings Chanting Chapter Three The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Other Final Cadences Summary of the Te‘amim The Scale of the Cantillation Chapter 6.7 Torah for the High Holiday Morning Service The Siluk and Etnäta Segments Tippe
a The Tevir Segment The Zakef Segment The Pashta/Yetiv Segment The Segol Segment The Revia‘ Segment The Legarmeh Segment The Geresh Segment Telishah Gedolah Pazer The Final Cadence Chanting the Blessings Kaddish Summary of the Te‘amim The Scale of the Te‘amim Chapter 7.1 Comparison Chart Chapter 7.2 The Ideal Reader Chapter 7.3 Guide to the Readings Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy Special Torah Readings Sim
at Torah Public Fast Days Rosh
odesh Shavuot High Holidays Haftarot Genesis — Haftarot Exodus — Haftarot Leviticus — Haftarot Numbers — Haftarot Deuteronomy — Haftarot Special Haftarot Ruth Song of Songs Ecclesiastes (Kohelet) Lamentations Esther Chapter 7.4 Glossary Bibliography Index