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Code-Switching in Luke and Acts

by Jonathan M. Watt (Author)
©1997 Others VIII, 310 Pages

Summary

Divergence of style characterizes the Greek dialect that appears in the New Testament books of Luke and Acts. Some parts contain standard Koine while others show varying degrees of Semitic influence. This sociolinguistic study concludes that the continuum of Semitized Greek appearing in the ancient texts functions like the metaphoric variety of code-switching performed by modern bilinguals. The variations can be explained, in part, by Luke's tendency to use Semitic linguistic features when describing Jewish subject matter while retaining standard Koine for Hellenistic interest.

Details

Pages
VIII, 310
Year
1997
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820436951
Language
English
Keywords
New Testament style influence
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., Paris, Wien, 1997. VIII, 310 pp.

Biographical notes

Jonathan M. Watt (Author)

The Author: Jonathan M. Watt, M.Div., M.A., Ph.D., is pastor of the College Hill Reformed Presbyterian Church in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. He also serves as a part-time faculty member at Geneva College and at the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary (Pittsburgh).

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Title: Code-Switching in Luke and Acts