Difference between revisions of "Egyptian Background to the Yosef Narratives/0"
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<h2>Egyptian Loanwords</h2> | <h2>Egyptian Loanwords</h2> | ||
− | <p>The stories of Yosef in Egypt contain many loanwords from Egyptian. </p> | + | <p>The stories of Yosef in Egypt contain many loanwords from Egyptian.  Given the Egyptian milieu of the stories, this is to be expected.<fn>See B. Noonan, "Egyptian Loanwords as Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus and Wilderness Traditions," Did I Not Bring Israel out of Egypt? ed. J. K. Hoffmeier, A. R. Millard, and G. A. Rendsbur, (Indianna, 2016): 48-68, who notes that the preponderance of Egyptian loanwords in these and the Exodus stories (in contrast to the rest of Tanakh) provides evidence of the authenticity of the Biblical text, as the borrowing points to a period of intense contact between the groups. There is further evidence that some of the words were borrowed during the Late Bronze Age, the period of the sojourn and Exodus, making the case even stronger.</fn>  For a discussion of each of t</p> |
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li>Proper names and titles</li> | + | <li>Proper names and titles – Many of the characters' names and titles have Egyptian origins, including Paroh, Potiphar, Zafenat Paneach (the name given to Yosef by Paroh), and Potiphera.</li> |
− | <li> | + | <li>Other words –</li> |
+ | <li>Material culture –</li> | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
Version as of 05:05, 20 December 2020
Egyptian Background to the Yosef Narratives
Egyptian Loanwords
The stories of Yosef in Egypt contain many loanwords from Egyptian. Given the Egyptian milieu of the stories, this is to be expected.1 For a discussion of each of t
- Proper names and titles – Many of the characters' names and titles have Egyptian origins, including Paroh, Potiphar, Zafenat Paneach (the name given to Yosef by Paroh), and Potiphera.
- Other words –
- Material culture –