KIMḤI, MOSES

KIMḤI, MOSES
KIMḤI, MOSES (known by the acronym Remak, i.e., Rabbi Moses Kimḥi; d. c. 1190), grammarian and exegete of Narbonne, Provence; son of Joseph Kimḥi and brother of David Kimḥi . As a grammarian, he generally followed his father, although his work shows traces of the influence of abraham ibn ezra , especially in terminology. He was little concerned with phonology and stressed the morphology of the verb. In the Mahalakh Shevilei ha-Da'at (Pesaro, 1508), Moses introduced the use of the root pkd (פקד) in paradigms and, considering nifal the passive of kal, arranged the conjugations in the order: kal, nifal, pi'el, pu'al, hifil, hofal, po'el, hitpa'el. These innovations became common in later grammars. The Mahalakh was glossed both by Elijah Levita and Shabbetai b. Isaac of Przemysl and was translated into Latin by Sebastian Muenster under the title Liber viarum linguae sacrae (Paris, 1520). Moses also wrote Sekhel Tov (published by D. Castelli, in REJ, 28 (1894), 212–27; 29 (1894), 100–10), a brief supplementary treatise dealing principally with the theoretical classification of nouns, particles, and verbs. A Sefer Taḥboshet, apparently dealing with anomalous grammatical forms, is no longer extant. In his exegesis, Moses followed the method of literal interpretation employed by his father and Ibn Ezra. Preferring to comment on generally neglected books of the Bible, he composed commentaries on Proverbs, Ezra, and Nehemiah – which have been printed in rabbinic Bibles but ascribed to Abraham Ibn Ezra – and a commentary on Job (published by I. Schwarz in Tikvat Enosh, 1868). Ta'anug Nefesh, an ethical work, has also been attributed to him. Moses Kimḥi exercised considerable influence on his brother David, who referred to him as "my brother, my teacher." Through Muenster's translation, his Mahalakh became one of the most popular grammars used by the 16th-century Christian Hebraists and was reprinted many times. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: Geiger, in: Oẓar Neḥmad, 1 (1856), 118; 2 (1857), 18–24; F.J. Ortuta y Murgoito, Moisés Kimchi y su obra Sekel Tob (1920); Bacher, in: REJ, 21 (1890), 281–5; J.B. Sermoneta, in: Seritti in Memoria di L. Carpi (1968), 59–100. (Frank Talmage)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

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  • Kimhi, Moses — ▪ European scholar Kimhi also spelled  Kimchi, Kimḥi, or Qimḥi,  also called  Remak (an acronym of Rabbi Moses Kimhi)   died c. 1190, Narbonne?, Toulouse, Fr.       European author of an influential Hebrew grammar, Mahalakh shevile ha daʿat… …   Universalium

  • Kimhi, Moses — (d. C.1190)    French grammarian and exegete, son of Joseph Kimhi. He was active in Narbonne, Provence. His Mahalakh Shevile ha Daat was the first printed Hebrew grammar (1489); trans lated into Latin, it was used by Christian scholars during the …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Moses Kimhi — (c. 1127 – c. 1190) was a medieval Jewish biblical commentator and grammarian. Birth and Early Life Kimhi was born around 1127, the eldest son of Joseph Kimhi and the brother of David Kimhi, known as the RaDaK. He was born and lived in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Kimhi — may refer to:* David Kimhi * Joseph Kimhi * Moses Kimhi …   Wikipedia

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  • KIMḤI, DAVID — (known as Radak from the acronym of Rabbi David Kimḥi; Maistre Petit; 1160?–1235?), grammarian and exegete of Narbonne, Provence. The son of Joseph Kimḥi and brother and pupil of , David was a teacher in his native town and was active in public… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • KIMḤI, MORDECAI — (second half of 13th century), a Provençal rabbi and halakhic authority of Carpentras, grandson of David Kimḥi . Urbach s opinion that he was the maternal grandfather of perez b. elijah cannot be accepted since Mordecai was an older contemporary… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • KIMḤI, RAPHAEL ISRAEL BEN JOSEPH — (first half of 18th century), emissary of Safed. Kimḥi was born in Constantinople where he studied under . When his teacher moved to Ereẓ Israel in 1713 he followed him and settled in Safed, where he studied under Jacob Vilna Ashkenazi. In 1728… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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  • Moses (given name) — Moses or Moshe is a male given name, after the biblical figure Moses. According to the Torah, the name Moses comes from the Hebrew verb meaning to pull/draw out [of water]. The infant Moses was given this name by Pharaoh s daughter after rescuing …   Wikipedia

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