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The Masoretes, who from about the 6th to the 10th century ce worked to reproduce the original text of the Hebrew Bible, added to \u201cYHWH\u201d the vowel signs of the Hebrew words Adonai or Elohim.
Qere and Ketiv, from the Aramaic qere or q're, \u05e7\u05b0\u05e8\u05b5\u05d9\u200e ("[what is] read") and ketiv, or ketib, kethib, kethibh, kethiv, \u05db\u05b0\u05bc\u05ea\u05b4\u05d9\u05d1\u200e ("[what is] written"), also known as "q're uchsiv" or "q're uchtiv," refers to a system for marking differences between what is written in the consonantal text of the Hebrew Bible, as ...
The Masoretes (Hebrew: \u05d1\u05e2\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05e1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4, romanized: Ba'alei ha-Masora) were groups of Jewish scribe-scholars who worked from around the end of the 5th through 10th centuries CE, based primarily in medieval Palestine (Jund Filastin) in the cities of Tiberias and Jerusalem, as well as in Iraq (Babylonia).
In Masoretic works these changes are ascribed to Ezra; to Ezra and Nehemiah; to Ezra and the Soferim; or to Ezra, Nehemiah, Zechariah, Haggai, and Baruch. All these ascriptions mean one and the same thing: that the changes were assumed to have been made by the Men of the Great Synagogue.
/ (\u02ccmæs\u0259\u02c8r\u025bt\u026ak) / adjective. of or relating to the Masora, the Masoretes, or the system of textual criticism and explanation evolved by them.
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The Masoretic manuscripts among the Dead Sea Scrolls are astonishingly similar to the standard Hebrew texts 1,000 years later, proving that Jewish scribes were accurate in preserving and transmitting the Masoretic Scriptures. p.

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