He published a concordance of words and phrases found in the Hebrew Bible in 1984.Įven-Shoshan was awarded the Israel Prize for language in 1978. The dictionary remains in print and is available online. It includes equivalent words in Aramaic, Akkadian, Arabic and Ugaritic. The dictionary contains almost 25,000 main entries and more than 70,000 words, including vowel variations. He studied at the College for Hebrew Teachers in Jerusalem and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.īetween 19, he worked on the New Dictionary of the Hebrew Language, known since 2003 as the Even-Shoshan Dictionary, his greatest accomplishment. His father remained in the Soviet Union and was imprisoned for his Zionist activities. He settled in Palestine in 1925, worked as a laborer, and changed his last name to Even-Shoshan, a translation of Rosenstein. Hebrew linguist and lexicographer Avraham Even-Shoshan dies at age 77 in Tel Aviv and is buried in Jerusalem.īorn Avraham Rosenstein in 1906 in Minsk, Belarus, he attended a Jewish school run by his father, Chaim, before going to a yeshiva. The Hebrew dictionary by Avraham Even-Shoshan, commonly known as the Even-Shoshan Dictionary, was first published (19481952) as ' ' (milon khadash, A New Dictionary), later (19661970) as ' ' (hamilon hekhadash, The New Dictionary), and finally (2003, well after his death) as ' ' (milon.
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