Publications
‘The Old Aramaic “feminine” suffix -t as an accusative case marker’. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft (in press).
‘Sound change in the Hebrew reading tradition’, in L. van Beek (ed.), Language change in Epic Greek and other oral traditions (in press; Leiden: Brill).
‘Another Akkadianism in Ezekiel (and Daniel): לבש בדים = labiš kitê “clad in linen”’. Journal of the American Oriental Society (in press).
‘The language of the inscriptions, from Nabataean to the Qur’an’, in A. Al-Jallad & A. Bdaiwi (eds), The many pasts of the Arabic script (in press; Riyadh: King Faisal Centre for Research and Islamic Studies).
‘The Aramaic script: an overview’, in A. Al-Jallad & A. Bdaiwi (eds), The many pasts of the Arabic script (in press; Riyadh: King Faisal Centre for Research and Islamic Studies).
‘Two more contexts for Ge‘ez *u > u and three for *a > ə ’. Afrika und Übersee 96 (2023), 96–110.
‘Proto-Semitic existentials: *yθaw and *laθθaw ’. Journal of Northwest Semitic Languages 49.2 (2023), 65–87.
‘What can Nabataean Aramaic tell us about Pre-Islamic Arabic?’ Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 34.1 (2023), 158–172.
‘The origin of the Ethiosemitic verb hlw “to be present”’. Journal of the American Oriental Society 142.3 (2022), 699–704.
‘Historical (in)accuracy and linguistic archaism in Daniel 5’. Biblica 103.2 (2022), 213–226.
Aramaic Daniel. A textual reconstruction of Chapters 1–7 . Studia Semitica Neerlandica 73. 2022; Leiden: Brill.
‘The Greek in Daniel 3: code-switching, not loanwords’. Journal of Biblical Literature 141/1 (2022), 121–136.
‘A valediction to Moses W. Shapira’s Deuteronomy document’. Bibliotheca Orientalis 78.3–4 (2021), 364–387.
‘Biblical Hebrew יש and Biblical Aramaic איתי followed by non-verbal clauses as markers of polarity contrast’. Journal of Northwest Semitic Languages 47.1 (2021), 61–78.
B.D. Suchard & F.J. Groen, ‘(Northwest) Semitic sg. *CVCC- , pl. *CVCaC-ū- : broken plural or regular reflex?’. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 84.1 (2021), 1–17.
‘The reconstruction of the Proto-Semitic genitive ending and a suggestion on its origin’. Studia Orientalia Electronica 9.1 (2021), 66–82.
‘The origins of the Biblical Aramaic reading tradition’. Vetus Testamentum 71 (2021), 105–119.
‘Phonological adaptation and the Biblical Aramaic and Biblical Hebrew reflexes of *i and *u ’ , in A.D. Hornkohl & G. Khan (eds), Semitic vocalization and reading traditions (Semitic Languages and Cultures; 2020; Cambridge: Open Book), 171–189.
The development of the Biblical Hebrew vowels . Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics 99. 2019; Leiden: Brill.
‘Sound changes in the (pre-)Masoretic reading tradition and the original pronunciation of Biblical Aramaic’. Studia Orientalia Electronica 7 (2019), 52–65.
‘The vocalic phonemes of Tiberian Hebrew’. Hebrew Studies 59 (2018), 193–207.
M.G. Kossmann & B.D. Suchard, ‘A reconstruction of the system of verb aspects in proto-Berbero-Semitic’. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 81.1 (2018), 41–56.
‘A triconsonantal derivation of the lamed-he paradigm’. Kleine Untersuchungen zur Sprache des Alten Testaments und seiner Umwelt 22 (2017), 205–221.
‘The origin of *s³ in the Ḥaḍramitic and Modern South Arabian third person feminine personal pronouns’. Journal of Semitic Studies 62.1 (2017), 69–76.
‘The Hebrew verbal paradigm of hollow roots: a triconsonantal account’. Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 166.2 (2016), 317–332.