Page:Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1910 Kautzsch-Cowley edition).djvu/448

  parallel with ) water which is affliction, drunk in trouble (imprisonment). Still more boldly,   which were taken out of the pastures, and  undressed stones which come from the quarry, probably a corruption of . A person and a condition are in apposition in  (unless  is to be read).—In  read, as in ,.

(c) Collocation of the person or thing (form) and material, or of the place or measure and its contents, e.g.   which were brass, i.e. of brass; cf. ,, , 18 (?); four rows, namely stones (for which 39:10 has ); cf. , (see, however, );  ; cf. ,, , , , ,  of silver; cf. 5:17,, (if the text be right). With the material placed before the measure, f..—A period of time and its contents are placed in apposition, i.e. a month’s time=for a whole month, , , 21, cf. ,, and two years’ time, i.e. two full years, , , , ,.

Finally, under this head may be included all the cases in which a numeral (regarded as a substantive) is followed by the object numbered in apposition, e.g. sc. filii, and.

(d) Collocation of the thing and the measure or extent, number, &c., e.g., (a small) number, i.e. only a few days; , i.e. twice as much money,  (unless  be constr. st.);  which was of the measure of the knees, which reached to the knees,  (also , in the same verse). This likewise includes the cases in which a noun is followed in apposition by a numeral (see ) or an adverb, originally conceived as a substantive, e.g., i.e. some few men;  , i.e. much understanding, unless  is to be taken as an adverb with , as in  with.