Liahona:

Liahona: "Prepared of the Lord, a Compass"

by Calvin D. Tolman
Liahona:

Liahona: "Prepared of the Lord, a Compass"

by Calvin D. Tolman

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Overview

Abstract: This study assesses some of the interpretations of the name Liahona which are unsatisfactory from a linguistic perspective. Since a dialect of Hebrew is the most likely underlying language of the Book of Mormon, the approach taken in this study parses the word Liahona into three meaningful segments in Hebrew: l-iah-ona; a Biblical Hebrew transliteration would be l-Yāh-Ɂōnấ. This name is a grammatical construction that attaches the prepositional prefix l- to Yāh, the name of "the Lord," followed by the noun *Ɂōnấ. The preposition l- in this context denotes the following name as the agent or the one who is responsible for the following noun, i.e., l-Yāh designates the Lord as the agent, author, or producer of the *Ɂōnấ. Languages are complex, and etymological conjectures in ancient languages are hypothetical; therefore, the explanations and justifications presented here, of necessity, are speculative in nature. Etymological explanations have to involve the complexity of linguistics and sound changes. The hoped-for result of this study is that a simple and reasonable explanation of the meaning of Liahona will emerge from the complexity, and a more reasonable translation of Liahona will be the result.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940186716143
Publisher: Interpreter Foundation
Publication date: 06/07/2022
Series: Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship , #51
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 364 KB

About the Author

Calvin D. Tolman graduated from University of Utah with a B.A. in Anthropology and an M.A. in Linguistics. He worked for forty years in the printing industry operating a web press and supervising and managing the pressroom. He is interested in the archaeology of Mesoamerica, especially the Maya. He attended the Maya Meetings in Texas at Austin for about twenty-five years. He has studied biblical Hebrew from a historical linguistic approach analyzing vowel changes from Proto-Semitic to biblical Hebrew. His church service includes a mission in West Mexico 1964–66, counselor in a bishopric, stake executive secretary, high councilor, bishop, and stake patriarch. He married Nancy Ann Byers. They have six children, nine grandchildren and four great-grandsons.
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