Page:Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1910 Kautzsch-Cowley edition).djvu/394

 down (with) rivers of water; 1:16,, , ; so also , ;  to gush out with, ; , , a; , ; , but also (transitively) to overflow with, probably in ; , ; so perhaps also , ;  with, .—Especially bold, but still on the analogy of the above examples, is , where it is said of a vineyard  (it shall be overgrown) with briers and thorns; cf. , and still more boldly,.

With the opposite idea,, ; (as though it were to lose), .—In  even  (prop. was there too little for us of ...?) as being equivalent to a verbum inopiae (= had we too little of ...?) is construed with an accusative; cf. .

(c) Several verbs of dwelling; the accusative in this case expresses either the place or the thing at which or with which any one tarries; thus, after , cf. ;, after ;  after ; , ,  with ; or even the person (the people) with whom any one dwells or is a guest, as ,  after ,  after ,  with.

5. Two accusatives (usually one of the person and one of the thing) are governed by—

(a) The causative conjugations (,, sometimes also Pilpel, e.g. , &c.) of verbs which are simply transitive in , and hence also of  and exuendi, &c. (cf. above a and u, and also y, z), e.g. . Thus very frequently  some one to know something;, &c.; cf. further,  (he arrayed him in vestures, &c.); cf. in the opposite sense, (both accusatives after  introduced by ); so with  with something,, , ;  some one with something, ; , , &c.;  some one to lack something, ;  some one with something, ;  some one drink something,  ff.

(b) Many verbs (even in ) which express an influence upon the object through some external means. The latter, in this case, is attached as a second object. They are especially—

(α) Verbs which express covering, clothing, overlaying,,  , &c.,   ff.,  ; cf. also, &c.; hence also verbs which express sowing (   30:23), planting , anointing  with anything.

(β) Expressions of giving, thus  where the accusative of the thing precedes; endowing,  ; and its opposite taking away, as  ;, , ; to give graciously,  ; to sustain (i.e. to support, to maintain, to furnish) with anything,