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Infinitive
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== Hebrew == [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] has ''two'' infinitives, the infinitive absolute (讛诪拽讜专 讛诪讜讞诇讟) and the infinitive construct (讛诪拽讜专 讛谞讟讜讬 or 砖诐 讛驻讜注诇). The infinitive construct is used after prepositions and is inflected with pronominal endings to indicate its subject or object: 讘讻转讜讘 讛住讜驻专 ''bikht艒bh hass艒ph膿r'' "when the scribe wrote", 讗讞专讬 诇讻转讜 ''ahare lekht艒'' "after his going". When the infinitive construct is preceded by {{Script/Hebrew|诇}} (''l蓹-'', ''li-'', ''l膩-'', ''lo-'') "to", it has a similar meaning to the English ''to''-infinitive, and this is its most frequent use in Modern Hebrew. The infinitive absolute is used for verb focus and emphasis, like in {{Script/Hebrew|诪讜转 讬诪讜转}} ''m艒th y膩m奴th'' (literally "a dying he will die"; figuratively, "he shall indeed/surely die").<ref>{{cite book |first=Scott N.|last=Callaham|title=Modality and the Biblical Hebrew Infinitive Absolute|series=Abhandlungen f眉r die Kunde des Morgenlandes|volume=71 |isbn=978-3-447-06158-2|place=Wiesbaden|publisher=Harrassowitz|date=2010}}</ref> This usage is commonplace in the [[Hebrew Bible]]. In Modern Hebrew it is restricted to high-register literary works. Note, however, that the Hebrew ''to''-infinitive is not the [[lemma (morphology)|dictionary form]]; instead, verbs are traditionally cited in the third-person masculine singular of the suffix conjugation (Modern Hebrew past tense), which is the least marked form.
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