Page:Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1910 Kautzsch-Cowley edition).djvu/529

 verse 32 a second jussive follows, likewise without, for he is not a man, as I am, that I should answer him, that we should come together in judgement). On the imperfect consecutive as expressing a logical consequence, see ; on the perfect consecutive as a consecutive clause after a participle, see.

2. Conjunctions introducing consecutive clauses are again (see, note 3) and =; especially again after interrogative sentences, according to ; cf. , with the imperfect, ; but in  with the perfect, in reference to an action already completed. On with the imperfect (or jussive) equivalent to so that, cf. further, ; with perfect and imperfect, , with the demonstrative force clearly discernible, depending on ; on =, cf. ,,.

On with a substantive or infinitive as the equivalent of a consecutive clause, see.

1. Aposiopesis is the concealment or suppression of entire sentences or clauses, which are of themselves necessary to complete the sense, and therefore must be supplied from the context. This is especially frequent after conditional clauses; besides the examples already given in, cf. also (the LXX and Samaritan supply );,  (in verse 19, after a long parenthesis, an imperative follows as the apodosis to this conditional clause);  f.,  (where indeed the text is probably very corrupt; cf. the addition in ); , ,. For other examples of various kinds, see, and especially ; in Aramaic, .&mdash;On , cf. at the end.

2. Anacoluthon is the change from a construction which has been already begun to one of a different kind. It is found especially after long parentheses, because the speaker has either lost sight of the beginning of his sentence, or for the sake of clearness purposely makes a new beginning; thus, and  (cf.  at the end); , , , , ,  (where, after a series of intermediate sentences, the predicate I saved you is