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Also in other semitic languages, see Why do feminine-looking numbers agree with masculine nouns and vice versa in Hebrew and Arabic?. As other languages seemingly stemmed from Biblical Hebrew (Loshon Hakodesh), what is the reason (secret meaning) of this polarity?

Note: I am not simply asking for an explanation of the grammatical phenomenon, but for Jewish sources who give some Jewish approach to this phenomenon of the Hebrew language.

mevaqesh
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Al Berko
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    It is not true that Arabic developed from Hebrew, please read the basics here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semitic_languages – Kazi bácsi Oct 21 '17 at 21:00
  • That's why I said Loshon Hakodesh - presumably, the language that preceded the creation. – Al Berko Oct 21 '17 at 21:53
  • "As other languages seemingly stemmed from Biblical Hebrew" detailing why you think this would be the case would improve the question. – mevaqesh Oct 21 '17 at 23:27
  • Questions about Hebrew are off-topic. If you could please explain why this is related to Judaism, I would be more than happy to rescind my vote to close. – DonielF Oct 22 '17 at 00:38
  • I added a comment clarifying why it is arguably a question about Judaism, not about Hebrew or grammar. If you disagree with the edit, roll it back... – mevaqesh Oct 22 '17 at 05:02
  • @Doniel - I don't know how can you set Hebrew off-topic if this is the language of Judaism. As all other human languages are thought to be arbitrary, Hebrew is the language of Creation and the Torah. I don't think it's fare to stamp Rashi's "דברה התורה בלשון בני אדם" on every question, equaling Hebrew to other languages. As such, you can rephrase it with: "Why Torah uses .... – Al Berko Oct 22 '17 at 11:53
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    @AlBerko “I don’t know how can you set Hebrew off-topic if this is the language of Judaism.” Sorry, I didn’t make the rules. The list of impermissible topics very clearly states that “questions unrelated to Judaism, even if they are about ... Hebrew language ... are generally off-topic.” (Con’t) – DonielF Oct 22 '17 at 12:02
  • (Con’t) As per (cc) @mevaqesh’s edit, tacking on “what does the Torah say about this” has already been discussed in meta. At the moment, the policy seems to stand at you have to explain why you might think that’s a valid question. You can’t just ask about using נה for plural feminine, nor can you just ask what the Torah has to say on it; you have to explain why you think the Torah would discuss it and thereby support the question. – DonielF Oct 22 '17 at 12:05

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