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Sunday night at one point Johan asked me about the fact that one of the names of God in the torah is a plural form. We were talking about creation and I said that the verb is singular (bara), but that didn't provide a fully-satisfactory answer.

Since then, though, I had a small revelation while studying Hebrew: there are other words that appear plural but aren't really, like mayim (water). More specifically, the ones I've encountered so far are collective nouns.

I don't know yet if that's a general rule, nor if every use of that name of God takes a singular verb, but the idea of a collective God, representing all of the various divine aspects bundled up together, is kind of interesting.

אלקים

Date: 2005-10-28 02:33 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
You'll notice that in the parts of Genesis where G-d is creating, the Torah uses the word אלקים. It's essentially G-d in the capacity of ruler over all the various facets of nature. It is indeed a collective noun, which I guess is why ברא is used and not ברים. That's the explanation I got :)

Hope that helps.

- Inkhorn

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