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A Grammar of Akkadian (Harvard Semitic Studies 45)

A Grammar of Akkadian (Harvard Semitic Studies 45)

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Studying Akkadian can't be easier
Review: - Very easy to study.
- Nice simple language.
- Makes you feel you are making progress quickly. I'm in lesson8 now, and I already have the feeling that I can speak Akkadian.
- Smart and well prepared exercises.

Many thanks for Dr.Huehnergard for this awesome work!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: First Rate
Review: If you're studying (or thinking of studying) Akkadian in a university setting, you don't need anyone to recommend a text for you. But if you're thinking about studying Akkadian on your own, look no further.

I'm not an academic, and I have no professional qualifications to judge this work. But I enjoy languages, and I know what works for me. This book is just about perfect for the student learning on his/her own. (To get full benefit, you really need to buy the companion "Key to a Grammar of Akkadian", by the same author.) The grammar is divided into graded lessons, and each lesson introduces 2 or 3 grammatical points. These are followed by vocabulary and exercises to test your command of the grammar just learned. Translation exercises from Akkadian to English, and English to Akkadian follow. (The format is very similar to that used by Lambdin in his excellent grammars of Biblical Hebrew, Coptic, and Ge'ez.) Again, the "Key to the Grammar" is indispensable; by checking your answers against the key, you'll know if you've mastered the grammar. No previous knowledge of linguistics or any other Semitic language is assumed.

After about 10 lessons, he introduces cuneiform signs, and thereafter, each lesson has a number of short readings provided in cuneiform. It's a little daunting at first...in my earlier stabs at Akkadian, I had only seen the (simpler) Neo-Assyrian versions of the signs. The author gives 3 varieties of each sign: the Old Babylonian lapidary form, the OB cursive form, and the Neo-Assyrian form.

Learning Akkadian is no easy task. This is a big book, and it's probably going to take me over a year to get through it. But the material is presented in a very accessible and straightforward manner, and each lesson builds on the material learned before. If you enjoy the intellectual challenge of learning a dead language, you'll love this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The language of the ancients...
Review: John Huehnergard's 'Grammar of Akkadian' is an excellent book for learning a difficult ancient language. Akkadian is not a language most schools (even most seminaries) offer as part of the curriculum; hence, many people who learn this language do so via self-study -- a key to the exercises is crucial in this event, and this is available as a separate volume. Huehnergard's Grammar is divided into 38 lessons (with sub-parts), with exercises for translation.

Akkadian is a major language of the ancient world, the earliest attested language among the Semitic languages. However, all of the Semitic languages present in the modern world (Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic, etc.) derive from the Western Semitic branch; only Akkadian and Eblaite were major Eastern Semitic branches, both now extinct. The demise of Akkadian is somewhat surprising, given that it was the language of Empire for a very long time -- Akkadian most likely originated in Akkad, capital of Sargon's empire in 2300 BCE in the Fertile Crescent; it remained a primary language for over a thousand years in the region, and was continued as a literary language until the first century CE. As is natural with any long-standing and wide-spread language, there are dialects of Akkadian (think of the progress of English from Beowulf through Chaucer and Shakespeare to the present). Huehnergard's text addressses this issues, concentrating on the Old Babylonian dialect, but giving information of the Assyrian dialect. Huehnergard's introduction discusses the different dialects, as well as Akkadian's relationship to the older but linguistically unrelated language of Sumerian, with which it coexisted for many centuries.

Huehnergard recognises that self-study is a distinct possibility, so the 38 lessons are prepared in such as way that an instructor's assistance is beneficial and preferable, but not strictly necessary. In each of the lessons, there are sub-topics such that two or three grammar points are covered. Beginning at chapter 9, actual cuneiform script is introduced alongside the transliterations; ten or so cuneiform signs are presented with each subsequent lesson. Each lesson also presents new vocabulary and vocabulary drills to reinforce earlier words.

Huehnergard's method asks students to learn to compose in Akkadian in addition to reading -- while most of those using this text to learn will be doing so for reading purposes only, Huehnergard feels that actually writing in the language helps reinforce the language skills. About a third of the way through the text, Huehnergard introduces actual Akkadian texts for translation, which eventually include portions of Hammurabi's code, religious texts and royal inscriptions. Huehnergard acknowledges that he has provided an 'overabundance' of exercises, which is useful for instructors to select among different texts, and for self-learners to get extra practice.

After lesson 38, there are additional readings,taken from portions of Gilgamesh; a glossary of Akkadian words, logograms, determinatives; an English-Akkadian word list; cuneiform signs lists; and several appendices. Huehnergard's introduction provides bibliographic listings of dictionaries, alternative grammars, and journal articles that is quite extensive.

This is a great text for learning this ancient and complex language. Whether your interest is history, religion, literature, or languages, this book is a good guide for elementary mastery of this important language.


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