Page:Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1910 Kautzsch-Cowley edition).djvu/472

 supported by  and, it is inconceivable that such an inversion of  and rectum should occur. It is more likely, either that the second substantive is in apposition to (thus  at the hand of every man, his brother, [unless it is a combination of the two readings  and ]; similarly 15:10 and he laid each or, more exactly, one piece of it, &c., and so probably also  every one, sc. his name), or  precedes as a kind of casus pendens, and only receives its nearer definition from the following substantive with suffix; thus,  (according to the context = to every one in his sack); 42:35, where  is virtually the predicate of ; , , , , , and especially.

(b) Any one, some one, e.g., , with a negative no one; so after , 29; before   and frequently.—Instead of  we sometimes find in a similar sense , e.g.  (cf. , , 11),  (soul) person, , , &c., and in a neuter sense  (prop. word, thing) for anything, , or  ,. With a negative means nothing; thus after  ; after  .—Cf. finally,, ; anything, (but in ,  ) and the expressions noticed in. The latter include also instances like I have no pleasure, i.e. of any man.

(c) In connexion with or, , masc. (as , fem., in connexion with  or ) is used to represent the ideas of alter—alter, the one—the other (in reference to persons, animals, or things without life; see the Lexicon) or the idea of one another, e.g.  and they separated them selves ;  five curtains ( fem.) shall be coupled together.

2. expresses the idea of self, both in the singular,, 16, 29:24,  (in all cases  equivalent to himself) and in the plural, , &c. Similar to this is the use of  (prop. in her inward part) in the sense of within herself.