Judah Aryeh Loeb ben Zvi Hirsch of Carpentras ( Hebrew: יהודה אריה לייב בן צבי הירש מקארפינטראץ, romanized: Yehuda Aryeh Leib ben Tsevi Hirsh mi-Karpintrats; fl. early 18th century) was a French Hebraist.
Judah was born in Krotoschin, and lived at Avignon and Carpentras. [1] He was the author of Ohole Yehudah, a Hebrew dictionary, in which special attention is paid to proper names and their etymology, and Geza' Yehudah, a short concordance. In his introduction to the former work he mentions two other works of his: Pene Aryeh and Ḥeleḳ Yehudah, both on the Pentateuch. The grammatical essay which preceded the Ḥeleḳ Yehudah was published with a German translation under the title Yesod leshon ha-ḳodesh. [2] A Hebrew manuscript in the Bodleian Library contains a grammatical poem, beginning, and a commentary by Judah, to which are added the paradigms of the verbs, with a Hebrew-German translation, and some grammatical rules. [3]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Toy, Crawford Howell; Seligsohn, M. (1904). "Judah Aryeh ben Ẓebi Hirsch". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 339–340.
Judah Aryeh Loeb ben Zvi Hirsch of Carpentras ( Hebrew: יהודה אריה לייב בן צבי הירש מקארפינטראץ, romanized: Yehuda Aryeh Leib ben Tsevi Hirsh mi-Karpintrats; fl. early 18th century) was a French Hebraist.
Judah was born in Krotoschin, and lived at Avignon and Carpentras. [1] He was the author of Ohole Yehudah, a Hebrew dictionary, in which special attention is paid to proper names and their etymology, and Geza' Yehudah, a short concordance. In his introduction to the former work he mentions two other works of his: Pene Aryeh and Ḥeleḳ Yehudah, both on the Pentateuch. The grammatical essay which preceded the Ḥeleḳ Yehudah was published with a German translation under the title Yesod leshon ha-ḳodesh. [2] A Hebrew manuscript in the Bodleian Library contains a grammatical poem, beginning, and a commentary by Judah, to which are added the paradigms of the verbs, with a Hebrew-German translation, and some grammatical rules. [3]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Toy, Crawford Howell; Seligsohn, M. (1904). "Judah Aryeh ben Ẓebi Hirsch". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 339–340.