Hillul
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The term hillul relates to hallel which also comes from the Hebrew root, hll, meaning vacuum or empty space. The etymology of hillul possibly preceeded the word hallel in defining a jubilation with hll.
halal see Chalal
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[edit] Etymology
hillul evolved in a parallel/etymology with hallel.
Recently a slight difference between the two words derived from a hieroglypic translation unrecognised with the letter he (see the letter "E" that was used in direct notation of the jubilation to which hallil has been most often related. The new found meaning of the lost usage as 'hillul' may to this day still , in lack of any better word, be defined than itself. Hillul, now, meaning~more "in jubilant exultation and exaltation", than the defined hillel~as "'in exaltation' and 'out of joy'" though both meanings defined as 'in jubilation'.
As the Semitic "hll" influenced the development of "hillul" as a word seen through the etymology, through philology there are other well documented variations of hll in other languages. The root (hll) is problematic because several different meanings that are current in the various Semitic languages. A similarity to some hll usages in Magyarwhich is of Hungarian decent, describes "hll" to be imbecile, weak-minded, mad; mocked at
The Phoenician alphabetic decendants carry the proto-Caananite fifth letter he standing out as {haw "window" / hll "jubilation" } .
[edit] Letters Of Reason
Letters in writing systems, the letter h with e; from he; E
observe contexts from compairison of hillil jubilation to the pairing
of a jubilation ;i.e. hillul jubilation found in the letter "E"'s history
as "he" being the later developing letter "e" as the fifth
letter in alphabet.
Observance of a Semitic letter h developing from a hieroglypic sign of a child.
Main Article
[edit] Proto-Alphabeto-Grammatologists- Reasoning
University of Chicago Webpage Title: Pipermail
Author/Article: ANE Wadi el-Hol Alphabetica (5): The joy-sign >-E
From article~
Fellow proto-alphabeto-grammatologists ,
Here, hard on the heels of the fourth, is my fifth posting on the two proto-alphabetic graffiti (or is it actually one graffito in two sections?) from Terror Gulch in Egypt...
...and continued quoted portions:
..."The possible goddess figure on Hol-Text 2 would have arms outstretched, but forearms not raised. see the two alleged child-pictographs as equivalent to hieroglyph A17 (seated child). Rather, they are much closer to hieroglyph A32, determinative for dance, and joy (in hyhnw "jubilate").
On this line of reasoning we can say that the writer(s) of the text(s) [one writer and one two-section inscription?] used 2 variants for H, namely:
A28: a man raising his arms in exaltation ("high") and exultation ("joy");
A32: a man dancing,in joy and jubilation, with one forearm raised and the other across his chest.
Both refer to Semitic HLL ('jubilation, celebration').
The acrophonic syllabogram HI in the Cana`anite logo-syllabary suggests that the word is hillul.
The conclusion found is that H exhibits another case of using variant forms.''----
--Ob Unum Verse Re 00:57, 18 February 2007 (UTC)In My Opinion;
"hillul" seems to have transition through history into "hallel"
To further my opinion; The evaluation extends from a larger study , yet this small portion adds credability to a persuation that may be correct in decifering the pronouncing with a letter's usage to add more to the context of a word as it is that the lareger sentence in its entirety helps to define the context of the word.
The evaluation described here today from University of Chicago source, also shares the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Southern_California USC] education department images in the article of the proto-alphabeto-grammatologists
[edit] WEBSITE & WEBPAGE Resources
University of Chicago Pipermail (https://listhost.uchicago.edu/pipermail/ane/2005-February/017858.html)