Qoheleth’s Idiolect and Its Cultural Context*

Abstract The language of Qoheleth is characterized by an awkward style and an unusual vocabulary. Past studies have assigned these peculiarities to linguistic factors, assuming that the book reflects an underrepresented dialect or register. The current study aims to expand the boundaries of this discourse by introducing extra-linguistic considerations into the discussion. Qoheleth is the only biblical book that is purely philosophical, focusing on abstract issues such as the purpose of life and the problem of free will. Such philosophical discussions require the use of an abstract terminology. The basic toolkit of any philosopher consists of conceptual phrases such as “time,” “space,” “cosmos,” “humanity,” “meaning,” etc. Yet abstract vocabulary was meager in the Hebrew at the author’s disposal. Paving a pioneering way in the realm of thought, Qoheleth’s author had to create a terminological system capable of expressing his new ideas. This article traces the ways in which the need for a personally-customized philosophical idiom shaped Qoheleth’s language. Exploring the origins of eleven key-terms in the book, this article reveals the dynamics that gave rise to Qoheleth’s personal lexicon. These include generalization and conceptualization of the extant semantic fields of certain terms in order to re-invent them as personal expressions reflecting the author’s philosophy. The author takes advantage of the “linguistic availability” of certain terms, that is, their foreignness or rareness that makes them better-suited, in his view, to bear newly created meanings. Taken together, Qoheleth’s neologisms constitute a personal idiolect, carefully designed to convey the author’s unique thought.

terms, that is, their foreignness or rareness that makes them better-suited, in his view, to bear newly created meanings. Taken together, Qoheleth's neologisms constitute a personal idiolect, carefully designed to convey the author's unique thought. not very skillfully, into a faulty Hebrew that repeatedly betrays its origin. 4 Another hypothesis, which has gained little acceptance, argues for Phoenician influence on the book's language. 5 What all these theories have in common is their purely linguistic perspectivethat is, they all assume that the problem of Qoheleth's language should be solved via models and tools known from the discipline of linguistic studies. The present paper seeks to expand the boundaries of the study of Qoheleth's language by introducing extralinguistic factors-especially cultural environment, intellectualhistorical developments, and individual thought-into the discussion. Building on the work of prominent scholars who have analyzed Qoheleth's extraordinary lexicon, I would like to suggest that Qoheleth's author creates a personal idiolect, discuss the mechanisms governing this process, and present the historical and intellectual circumstances that gave rise to the unique linguistic project known as Qoheleth's language. 6 ■ Qoheleth's Personal Lexicon: History of Scholarship Almost all students and commentators of Qoheleth have attempted to analyze the book's special lexicon. Two prominent contributions in this regard are Michael Fox's influential analysis of key terms in Qoheleth and Antoon Schoors' exhaustive and detailed treatment of the book's vocabulary. 7 These and similar studies reveal an intriguing phenomenon, whose deeper significance has thus far not been acknowledged: dozens of terms and expressions in Qoheleth bear a unique meaning, different from that assigned them outside the book. While many scholars have contributed to the joint effort to reconstruct this peculiar lexicon, very few have attempted to account for the phenomenon itself. As will be shown below, these lexical peculiarities are likely to represent a deliberate attempt on the part of the book's author to create a personally customized vocabulary. This linguistic project is central to the understanding of the book's language and thought. 6 Masculine pronouns will be used throughout this article because the writer believes that the author of Qoheleth was in all likelihood a man. 7  Two exceptional references to this aspect of Qoheleth's language are found in Martin Hengel's seminal work on Hellenistic Jewry and in Peter Machinist's study of fate in Qoheleth. 8 Hengel remarks that the book of Qoheleth is characterized by Hellenistic thinking patterns that require new forms of expression. These include the assignment of novel meaning to existing lexemes, especially the verbal root ‫תו"ר‬ and the abstract nouns ‫,מקרה‬ ‫,יתרון‬ and ‫.חלק‬ The terms ‫מקרה‬ and ‫חלק‬ as reflections of a personal terminology are further discussed by Machinist, who portrays the processes of abstraction involved in the creation of these expressions. Machinist shows how these produce the semantic fields of fate and time in Qoheleth and inspire the assignment of special meanings to at least five key terms in the book: ‫,מקרה‬ ‫,חלק‬ ‫,מעשה‬ ‫,חשבון‬ and ‫.עולם‬ Associating this tendency with other unique characteristics of Qoheleth, Machinist links it especially with Qoheleth's awareness of the reasoning process involved in his rational thinking. 9 Building on these pioneering works, the present paper seeks to evaluate Qoheleth's language as a philosophical initiative. I will demonstrate how the attempt to create a personal idiom goes beyond the specific terms and semantic fields identified by Hengel and Machinist, demonstrating itself practically throughout the entire scope of Qoheleth's lexicon. This, in turn, calls for a new appreciation of Qoheleth's vocabulary as a means for understanding the book's unique thought.

■ Qoheleth the Philosopher
The book of Qoheleth is the only biblical book that is essentially philosophical. Its concern lies with abstract, contemplative issues such as the purpose of life, the essence of death, and the problem of free will. To be sure, other biblical books are also interested in theology and ideology, but these always take a figurative form-prophecy, law, narrative, historiography, wisdom, psalmody, and so on. 10 Thus, the problem of evil is discussed in the book of Job through the concrete story of a pious sufferer. The idea that generalization is a trademark of philosophical thinking was suggested by Greek philosophers themselves. It was Aristotle who ascribed a philosophical quality to earlier thinkers who attempted to define the "principle of all things"-that is, to generalize phenomena. 13 An important contribution to the appreciation of Qoheleth's interest in the totality of phenomena was made by Yehoshua Amir. 14 Amir has noted that Qoheleth's author is the only biblical thinker who seeks to characterize ‫הכל‬ "everything"-that is, to capture by way of induction the basic principles that govern reality. For instance: All is vanity.

‫הבל‬ ‫הכל‬
He brings everything to pass precisely at its time.

‫אחד‬ ‫מקום‬ ‫אל‬ ‫הולך‬ ‫הכל‬
All are of the dust, and all turn to dust again.

‫הכל‬ ‫את‬ ‫יענה‬ ‫והכסף‬
As Amir shows, a similar tendency to define "everything" can be observed in pre-Socratic philosophy. It is noteworthy that the word ‫כל‬ is the most frequent term in Qoheleth, occurring 90 times in the book-far more than central terms such as ‫,הבל‬ ‫,אני‬ and ‫.עמל‬ 15 Qoheleth thus places ‫הכל‬ at the center of his thought. Rather than understanding certain details of reality, he is interested in capturing it as a whole. 11 Indeed, some degree of concretization is apparent in the autobiographical speech (Qoh 1:12-2:26), where King Qohelet makes experiments to determine whether there is anything worthy of living for. It should be noted, however, that 1) this royal framework is limited to 1:1-2:26, after which it is abandoned and does not appear again until the book's epilogue; and 2) the core of this speech is still abstract: it is clear that the narrative framework is designed to serve the philosophical questions. These questions are not presented as the king's personal problems but rather as general existential issues. For a study that stresses concrete, pseudo-historiographic aspects in the book (mainly through intertextuality) see Jennifer Barbour This exceptional usage-unknown in Biblical or in post-Biblical Hebrew-may perhaps reflect the author's increased interest in ‫כל‬ as a concept and his desire to generalize concrete phenomena into an encompassing statement regarding totality. These factors seem to have contributed to the author's tendency to use the term ‫,כל‬ with its all-inclusive connotation, even in cases where this usage creates a logical inaccuracy.
Another interesting indication of the philosophical nature of the book of Qoheleth is the arena where the drama takes place, referred to in the book as ‫לבי‬ "my heart." 17 In biblical terms, the heart is the locus of human cognition, including consciousness, thinking, and emotion. External reality, where Qoheleth the king establishes an extravagant court (2:1-11) or where the rich mistreat the poor (4:1-3), is secondary in importance to the impression left by these events on Qoheleth's mind. There is no other biblical book whose plot, so to speak, takes place solely within the speaker's mind. Qoheleth's philosophical discussion requires the use of abstract terminology.
The basic tool kit of any philosopher consists of conceptual phrases such as time, space, cosmos, humanity, meaning. Yet the Hebrew that lay at Qoheleth's disposal contained little abstract vocabulary. The two Hebrew varieties available to him-Biblical Hebrew and Mishnaic Hebrew (or a predecessor thereof)-were both characterized by a figurative language that sought to present the world in concrete patterns. 18 Paving a pioneering way in the realm of thought, Qoheleth's author had to create a terminology capable of expressing this new mode of contemplating existence. In what follows, I suggest that this specific need for a personally customized philosophical idiom shaped Qoheleth's language to no less a degree than its linguistic environment. To establish this argument, I shall first examine in detail one test case, namely, the phrase ‫השמש‬ ‫.תחת‬ Other examples, with brief clarifications, will then follow.

■ The Case of ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬
Research into this expression has usually focused on understanding the meaning of the phrase and revealing its origin. 19 The present discussion seeks to shift this traditional focus towards tracing the dynamics that gave rise to the choice of this specific term in order to load it with a personally customized meaning.
Occurring twenty-nine times in Qoheleth, 20 ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ "under the sun" is one of the most important expressions in the book. It refers to the arena where human existence takes place-the laboratory in which Qoheleth makes his philosophical observations. Yet ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ is defined by specific boundaries: rather than simply "world," the phrase signifies the domain of living creatures, as opposed to the sphere of the dead-Sheol. 21 This specific meaning is best exemplified in cases where these two realms are contrasted: ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ ‫נעשה‬ ‫אשר‬ ‫הרע‬ ‫המעשה‬ ‫את‬ ‫ראה‬ ‫לא‬ ‫אשר‬ ‫היה‬ ‫לא‬ ‫עדן‬ ‫אשר‬ ‫את‬ ‫משניהם‬ ‫וטוב‬ But better than either is he who has not yet been and has not seen the evil deeds that are done under the sun. (Qoh 4:3) ‫זכרם‬ ‫נשכח‬ ‫כי‬ ‫שכר‬ ‫להם‬ ‫עוד‬ ‫ואין‬ ‫מאומה‬ ‫יודעים‬ ‫אינם‬ ‫והמתים‬ ‫שימתו‬ ‫יודעים‬ ‫החיים‬ ‫כי‬ ‫תחת‬ ‫נעשה‬ ‫אשר‬ ‫בכל‬ ‫לעולם‬ ‫עוד‬ ‫להם‬ ‫אין‬ ‫וחלק‬ ‫אבדה‬ ‫כבר‬ ‫קנאתם‬ ‫גם‬ ‫שנאתם‬ ‫גם‬ ‫אהבתם‬ ‫גם‬ ‫השמש‬ For the living know that they will die, while the dead know nothing, and no longer have reward, for their memory is forgotten. Their love and their hatred and their envy have already perished, and they never more have a portion in all that is done under the sun. (Qoh 9:5-6) Semantically, then, the specific term ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ makes sense in its context: it nicely excludes the dark Sheol, where no sunlight penetrates. Yet what is the origin of this peculiar phrase? Outside Qoheleth, ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ is very difficult to find. It is unknown in Biblical Hebrew, post-Biblical Hebrew, and contemporary Aramaic. The closest parallels appear in a curse formula documented in several ancient Near Eastern languages: "May he not live under the sun" or "May he have no progeny under the sun." 22 Directed against foreign armies, grave robbers, and so on, this curse is currently known from several examples in Phoenician, Elamite, Urartian, and peripheral Akkadian. 23 The Phoenician occurrences, appearing on the sarcophagi of two fifth-century BCE kings-Tabnit of Sidon and his son Ešmunazar-are especially relevant to this discussion: Qoheleth's author to borrow an apparently uncommon, technical term whose usage is limited to the narrow genre of royal curse formulas? 27 The choice is even more puzzling in light of the fact that Biblical Hebrew offers the author at least two alternatives for ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ in the sense of "world": ‫השמים‬ ‫תחת‬ "under the heavens" and ‫הארץ‬ "earth." Both phrases are used in Biblical Hebrew to denote "world." See, for example: Interestingly, the author is familiar with these terms, and uses them, albeit sporadically. ‫השמים‬ ‫תחת‬ occurs only three times in the book. One example is: The author obviously finds neither of these terms appropriate for the specific philosophical notion he has in mind, a notion more accurate than the general concept "world." Instead, he opts for the more exotic, uncommon phrase ‫השמש‬ ‫.תחת‬ It is precisely the limited distribution of ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ and its narrow technical meaning that makes it semantically "available," enabling its adaptation into a novel, personal concept.
Similar dynamics of utilizing terms that are conceived as "available" for semantic reloading are discernable in other core terms of Qoheleth's personal lexicon. Hereafter, I shall refer to this dynamic as the utilization of semantic availability. Semantic availability may result from various factors, such as limited distribution, narrow technical meaning, and foreign origin.

■ Additional Cases of Personally Customized Terms
The above analysis of ‫השמש‬ ‫תחת‬ may shed new light on the dynamics that gave rise to Qoheleth's personal philosophical lexicon. These involve generalization, abstraction, conceptualization, and/or specification of existing terms. The collection of terms that underwent this deliberate semantic shift includes well-known Hebrew words as well as rare or borrowed ones. In the latter case, utilization of semantic availability is discernable. The phrases listed below, all serving as key terms in the book of Qoheleth, are prominent examples of these semantic mechanisms.
1. ‫:יתרון‬ Occurring ten times in Qoheleth, 28 this term designates the profit gained by a deed or activity, either when examined in and of itself or when compared with another deed. 29 ‫יתרון‬ thus refers to one of Qoheleth's central objects of research, as he attempts to discover whether there is anything worthy of doing, knowing, or having. Judging by our currently available sources, the term was barely known, if at all, in contemporary Hebrew. 30 It was probably borrowed from Aramaic, where it is fairly documented in various dialects. The Aramaic ‫יתרן‬ / ‫יותרן‬ may signify "abundance, excess (sometimes monetary), remainder, or surplus." 31 Based on these meanings, the author creates a personally designed Aramaism to convey the philosophical concept of "material or mental benefit of a deed or activity." 32 The 28 Qoh 1:3; 2:11; 2:13; 3:9; 5:8; 5:15; 7:12; 10:10 (twice); 10:11. 29 In the latter sense, ‫יתרון‬ designates "advantage." 30 The term ‫יתרון‬ is unknown in Biblical Hebrew outside Qoheleth. In post-Biblical Hebrew, it is mostly used in paraphrases of or quotes from the book of Qoheleth. I was able to find only two Mishnaic Hebrew occurrences independent of Qoheleth: y. Ter. 11:8 and Lev. Rab. 22:1. Later rabbinic literature, from the geonic period onward, uses the term more frequently, probably under the influence of Geonic Aramaic (see below). These distribution patterns seem to point to an Aramaic term that was only sporadically borrowed into Hebrew and did not become, at least in Qoheleth's times, part of the standard Hebrew lexicon. Note, however, that the problem of the term's origin has little bearing on the theory presented in this study. Even if one assumes that the word had already penetrated Hebrew when the book of Qoheleth was authored, it still underwent the same process of semantic reworking: in the two aforementioned Mishnaic Hebrew sources, ‫יתרון‬ means "excess," whereas Qoheleth's author gives it the defined, specific meaning described below. 31 The term is documented in the following principle of semantic availability is at play here, albeit in a slightly different form than that found in ‫השמש‬ ‫.תחת‬ There, the semantic availability is due to the narrow generic usage of the expression; here, it is born out of the foreignness of the phrase, which makes it free to bear a desired philosophical meaning.
2. ‫:עמל‬ In postexilic Hebrew, this term refers to "labor, toil" or, metonymically, to possessions accumulated through labor. 33 In Qoheleth, these common meanings are generalized and conceptualized. ‫עמל‬ in Qoheleth refers to various manifestations of life's mental, physical, and social strains. 34 When referring to property, it is associated with the tiresome toil that has produced it. In half its occurrences (11 of 22), ‫עמל‬ is preceded by Qoheleth's favorite particle, ‫.כל‬ The phrase ‫עמל‬ + ‫כל‬ usually means the "total sum of efforts and toil during one's life" or "total accumulated assets." Qoheleth thus uses this term to designate two of the book's most important objects of investigation: human deeds and property. 35 The dull connotation of ‫עמל‬ implies that these are not only futile but also tiresome and irritating.
3. ‫:הבל‬ This is Qoheleth's most important key term, constituting the book's leitmotif: the problem of life's meaning(lessness). 36 Its central place in Qoheleth's thought has made it equally prominent in modern scholarly discussions, the result being a variety of different modern definitions of the term. 37 For the sake of the current discussion, however, suffice it to say that the term is used in Qoheleth to describe the futility of human existence, including nuances that derive from Qoheleth's specific patterns of thought, such as absurdity and injustice. This reflects a deliberate and systematic adaptation of a term whose original meaning is much simpler, usually referring to "breath," "vanity," or "lie." 4. ‫רוח‬ ‫;רעיון‬ ‫רוח‬ ‫רעות‪:a‬רעות‬ and ‫רעיון‬ are pure Aramaic terms that, like ‫,יתרון‬ were probably not borrowed into any Hebrew variety of the time. Qoheleth's author seems to have adopted them directly from Aramaic into his own Hebrew, possibly utilizing their semantic availability as foreign words. The Aramaic term ‫רעות‬ means "will, wish.  38 For ‫רעות‬ "will" in various Aramaic dialects, see, e.g., HALOT 5:1983; Edward M. Cook, Dictionary of Qumran Aramaic (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2015) 224; Sokoloff, Babylonian concept of "useless pursuit or striving." 39 The terms may also appear in the hendiadys ‫רוח‬ ‫ורעות‬ ‫הבל‬ or ‫רוח‬ ‫ורעיון‬ ‫,הבל‬ in which case they are colored by the various meanings of the core term ‫הבל‬ discussed above. 40 By creating the expressions ‫רוח‬ ‫רעות‬ and ‫רוח‬ ‫רעיון‬ on the basis of contemporary Aramaic, the author reinforces the concept of the futility of human ambition. 5. ‫:מקרה‬ As noted above, this term was discussed by Hengel and more thoroughly by Machinist as an example of Qoheleth's personal lexicon. The semantic shift at play is clearly visible here. This noun is rarely found in ancient Hebrew. In biblical books outside Qoheleth it only occurs three times, with the meaning "incidental event." 41 In postbiblical varieties, it does not function as a living term, appearing only in biblical quotes or paraphrases. As explained above, rarity produces semantic availability, here utilized by Qoheleth's author to create a term relating to death, a theme in which he is greatly interested. The author makes ‫מקרה‬ a common phrase in his book, carrying the specific meaning of "death as the inescapable fate of all living beings." 42 6. ‫:חלק‬ The original biblical meaning of this word is "share, allotted portion (of a land, heritage, etc.). In some Aramaic dialects, including Biblical Aramaic, which is closer to Qoheleth in time and place, the term signifies "thought," a meaning clearly different from that of ‫רעות‬ (HALOT 5:1983; Sokoloff, Babylonian Aramaic, 1090; cf. also Biblical Hebrew, even in Qoheleth itself [2:22]). Only in Syriac and Christian Palestinian Aramaic does the meaning of ‫רעיון‬ come closer to that assigned to ‫רעות‬ in Qoheleth: in Syriac, ‫רעיון‬ sometimes means "will, deliberation"; in Christian Palestinian Aramaic, it signifies "pleasure" (Michael Sokoloff, A Syriac Lexicon: A Translation from the Latin, Correction, Expansion, and Update of C. Brockelmann's Lexicon Syriacum [Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns; Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias, 2009] 1480; idem, Christian Palestinian Aramaic, 406). Judging by the synonymous use of ‫רעיון‬ and ‫רעות‬ in Qohelet, we may cautiously assume that the Aramaic variety spoken by the book's author assigned the meaning "will" to ‫.רעיון‬ Affinities between Qoheleth and later Syriac dialects being somewhat unexpected, however, it is equally possible to theorize that ‫רוח‬ ‫רעיון‬ was made synonymous with ‫רוח‬ ‫רעות‬ by Qoheleth's author, independently of similar tendencies in remote Aramaic dialects. 39  often depicts one's ‫חלק‬ as transient and temporary, stressing the unequal nature of the ‫‪'s‬חלק‬ divinely initiated distribution. 45 The former characteristic links ‫חלק‬ with the issue of death; the latter is related to the problem of justice. ‫חלק‬ is thus an essential term, supplying the author with a higher degree of elaboration and precision when discussing the crucial philosophical problems of death and (in)justice. 7. ‫ושת"ה‬ ‫:אכ"ל‬ Rather than referring to the concrete actions of eating and drinking, this syntagm is used in Qoheleth as a code for the carpe diem ethos that is central to the book's thought. The meaning of ‫ושת"ה‬ ‫אכ"ל‬ in the book is approximately the "successful utilization of one's assets for the sake of pleasure while still on earth." 46 8. ‫שהיה‬ and ‫:שיהיה‬ The root ‫הי"ה‬ is very common in all Hebrew dialects. The forms ‫שהיה‬ and ‫שיהיה‬ literally mean "that which has been" and "that which will be," respectively. In Qoheleth, however, they are employed to denote the abstract categories of "past" and "future," probably to compensate for the lack of relevant terms in contemporary Hebrew. 47 9. ‫תו"ר‬ and ‫:סב"ב‬ These two motion verbs are assigned an abstract cognitive meaning by Qoheleth's author. The root ‫תו"ר‬ originally denotes "seek out (physically)." In Qoheleth, however, it is used to express the cognitive action of enquiring. 48 The root ‫סב"ב‬ originally means "to turn (physically)." Qoheleth likewise employs it in the sense of "turn to another line of thinking"; "turn around in search for meaning." 49 The author hereby fills the need for verbs that would describe the cognitive activity of the philosopher. 10. ‫שמחה‪,a‬שמ"ח‬ and ‫בטוב‬ ‫‪a‬רא"ה‬ : As Michael Fox has shown, the root ‫שמ"ח‬ in Qoheleth does not denote joy or happiness. 50 Rather, it usually refers to sensual pleasure, or-metonymically-means and accessories that yield pleasure. 51 This specific connotation is not unique to Qoheleth. Biblical Hebrew often assigns the root ‫שמ"ח‬ a similar meaning, especially when associating it with feasting or wine drinking. 52 Biblical Hebrew, however, does not tend to differentiate between sensual enjoyment and happiness, using the root ‫שמ"ח‬ to convey a variety of combinations of these elements. Only very rarely does the Bible use ‫שמ"ח‬ to refer to enjoyment devoid of authentic happiness. 53 In Qoheleth, the latter nuance is predominant. The author confines the root ‫שמ"ח‬ to conveying the idea of purely sensual pleasure or satisfaction. In Qoheleth's Hebrew, the distinction between happiness and sensual pleasure becomes crucial. Often lacking any joy, Qoheleth's ‫שמחה‬ is a partial and temporary compensation for the existential meaninglessness that troubles him. 54 A similar process can be identified in the case of ‫בטוב‬ ‫.רא"ה‬ Whereas Biblical Hebrew uses this expression to denote happiness and longevity, 55 in Qoheleth it serves as a synonym for ‫-שמ"ח‬that is, another signification of sensual pleasure. 56 The semantic shift in this case is slight, based on the reinforcement of an existing Biblical Hebrew meaning. Its importance lies in the fact that it exemplifies how Qoheleth's author standardizes and consolidates the meaning of specific terms in light of their existing semantic fields in order to create a specific desired nuance.
The eleven cases discussed above exemplify a deliberate linguistic endeavor. Shifting the semantic fields of certain terms, Qoheleth's author reinvents them as personal expressions in accordance with his unique philosophy. Even when good Biblical Hebrew equivalents are at hand, he often opts for other, less well-known ones and assigns them a philosophical valence. In so doing, he occasionally takes advantage of linguistic availability-the foreignness, rareness, or technical usage of certain terms that seem to make them better suited, in his mind, to bear newly created meanings. In other cases, he loads well-known Hebrew terms with novel significations. As it turns out, this process of deliberate adaptation is most blatantly at play when it comes to core terms in Qoheleth's philosophy. Here, the need for personally customized lexemes is most pressing. Taken together, Qoheleth's neologisms constitute a personal idiolect, carefully designed to convey his unique thought.
At this point the question should be raised whether all the examples of special meanings discussed here may be ascribed to a specific variety of Proto-Mishnaic Hebrew spoken in the author's environment. Put otherwise, is it possible that, rather than a deliberate innovation of an individual mind, we are dealing here with traces of a Hebrew variety unknown to us-be it a dialect, a sociolect, or a vernacular-in which all these specific meanings and connotations were considered standard?
This alternative theory, while not impossible, is rather unlikely for several reasons. First, the specific meanings assigned in Qoheleth to the terms under discussion are in complete agreement with the themes that stand at the focus of the book's thought, especially the problem of life's meaning in the shadow of death. As shown above, the specific connotations assigned to individual terms often convey the precise concept of Qoheleth regarding the relevant issue. Designated meanings 54 Qoh 2:1-2; 3:12-13, 22; 8:15. 55 Ps 27:13; 34:13. Cf. also Ps 128:5; Job 7:7. 56 The phrase appears 6 times in Qoheleth, always denoting pleasure: 2:1, 24; 3:13; 5:17; 6:6. such as the "material or mental benefit of a deed or activity" for ‫יתרון‬ or the "lot of each human being while living on earth, as allocated to him or her by God" for ‫חלק‬ can hardly reflect a broad idiomatic usage. These are theologically specific, personally created expressions.
To these considerations, we may add an insight regarding dialectical dynamics in Second Temple Hebrew. Linguistic study of Second Temple Hebrew corpora has demonstrated that, despite their linguistic diversity, the various Second Temple varieties still share a great deal of their traits. The book of Qoheleth is itself a good example of the linguistic overlap among the various corpora: dozens of linguistic features found in Qoheleth can be classified as late on the basis of parallels found in Mishnaic Hebrew, Ben-Sira Hebrew, Qumran Hebrew, contemporary Aramaic sources, and other corpora. Such overlap is lacking, however, when it comes to philosophical phrases like the ones discussed above. None of these terms bears the same meaning in any First or Second Temple Hebrew corpus known to us. Were Qoheleth's philosophical lexemes a standard feature in any specific variety of the time, one would expect them to occur, even sporadically, in one or more of the relevant corpora. The best way to account for this state of affairs is to assume that while many Late Biblical Hebrew features of Qoheleth reflect an existing linguistic environment, the book's peculiar philosophical terminology is idiolectal in nature, reflecting a deliberate attempt to create a personally customized lexicon.
■ The Limits of Qoheleth's Linguistic-Philosophical Project: The

Concept of Infinity
Qoheleth's lexical endeavor often comes at the expense of the richness of style. Unlike the biblical poets, who employ a diverse, vivid lexicon, Qoheleth's writing, with its aspiration for conceptual accuracy, is often dictated by the fixed range of his personally created terms. To illustrate the scope of this phenomenon, I would like to examine briefly a case where the author does not adopt philosophical phraseology: ‫משמע‬ ‫אזן‬ ‫תמלא‬ ‫ולא‬ ‫לראות‬ ‫עין‬ ‫תשבע‬ ‫לא‬ ‫לדבר‬ ‫איש‬ ‫יוכל‬ ‫לא‬ ‫יגעים‬ ‫הדברים‬ ‫כל‬ All things are constantly laboring: No one is able to utter it, the eye is not sated with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing. (Qoh 1:8) This verse presents the conclusion Qoheleth draws from his observation of the cyclical movement of four natural elements: the earth (1:4), sun (1:5), wind (1:6), and water (1:7). 57 From these he concludes that "All things are constantly laboring." 58 That is, all elements, bodies, and items in the cosmos are in constant motion. Because this motion never ends, "no one is able to utter it": the endless movement cannot be exhausted by words. Nor can it be fully perceived by human senses: "the eye is not sated with seeing nor the ear filled with hearing." 57 For the structure of this passage and the interpretation of v. 8 within its context, see recently Nili Samet, "Qohelet 1,4 and the Structure of the Book's Prologue," ZAW 126 (2014) 92−100. 58 For the rendering of ‫יגעים‬ as "laboring" in this context, see ibid., 93 n. 3; HALOT 2:386.
According to this interpretation, Qoheleth seeks to describe here-in a lengthy, poetic style-the concept of infinity. This reading finds support in 4:8, where the phrase "the eye is not sated" occurs again with the same meaning:

‫עשר‬ ‫תשבע‬ ‫לא‬ ‫עינו‬ ‫גם‬ ‫עמלו‬ ‫לכל‬ ‫קץ‬ ‫ואין‬
There is no end to all his wealth and his eyes are never sated with riches. (Qoh 4:8) The expression "his eyes are never sated" parallels the phrase "there is no end," both referring to the infinite quantity of the wealth described. 59 We may conclude that in attempting to describe the concept of infinity, Qoheleth's author opts for a collection of poetic metaphors rather than a fixed technical term. In addition to the term ‫קץ‬ ‫אין‬ "there is no end," occasionally used throughout the book, 60 he uses metaphorical depictions such as "the eye is not sated" and "the ear is not filled." It seems that unlike other thinkers, Qoheleth's author does not regard infinity as an essential philosophical notion. Nor does he seem interested in exploring infinity as a concept-at least not to the extent of requiring a fixed term. He is therefore content to use traditional biblical modes of expressionmetaphorical, figurative phrases-rather than philosophically precise ones. The linguistic project of creating a personal idiolect therefore seems to be limited to core issues of the book's thought.
■ Qoheleth's Philosophical Language: Some Implications The linguistic initiative described here may have broader implications for the study of Qoheleth and beyond. While a full discussion of these is beyond the scope of the current paper, I would like to refer briefly, by way of conclusion, to three derivative insights relating to the fields of Jewish intellectual history, the philosophy of language, and biblical studies-each of which demands further study.
The linguistic initiative discussed in this paper is comparable with similar tendencies exhibited by thinkers and philosophers in various times and places. Of special interest is the Hebrew philosophical lexicon created by medieval Jewish scholars in an effort to create a designated vocabulary to express their Neo-Aristotelian ideas. 61 This project bears surprising similarities to the mechanisms identified above in Qoheleth. Maimonidean scholar Alfred L. Ivry describes this medieval linguistic endeavor as follows: The Hebrew origins of the new words often have but tangential significance for the new meanings assigned them, meanings which are Greek in origin. In this fashion the Hebrew translation movement both attached and severed itself from its own sources, creating a philosophical language in Hebrew which was a distinct novum in that language, though not a creatio ex nihilo. . . . The Hebrew translation movement found the words with which to give voice to a philosophical view of the world. 62 The relationship between the semantic dynamics typical of Qoheleth's project and those of medieval Jewish scholars, as well as those reflected in similar linguistic projects from other cultural environments, have yet to be studied.
Examined from a broader cultural-linguistic perspective, the fascinating interrelation between thought and language traced here may be of value for the two hundred-year-old discussion of linguistic relativity conducted by cognitive linguists and philosophers of language. This field concerns the question of whether-and, if so, to what extent-one's language molds one's patterns of thought. From the works of such influential thinkers as Wilhelm von Humboldt, Franz Boas, Edward Sapir, and Benjamin Lee Whorf through to recent studies, scholars are still seeking to clarify the delicate relation between language, thought, and cultural patterns. Our findings may present a modest contribution to this discussion since, in Qoheleth's case, the influence is clearly bidirectional, language and thought sustaining one another. The introduction of novel thinking patterns gives rise to new linguistic structures, which in turn expand the intellectual space in which innovative thinking can take place. The reciprocal system reflected here is in line with recent trends in the field of cognitive linguistics. Having long abandoned the idea of linguistic determinism, these acknowledge the complex relationship between language and thought, attempting to develop more nuanced models to explain it. 63 Turning back now to the field of biblical studies, the current study also bears on the intellectual-historical context of the book. As Hengel and Machinist have already demonstrated, the peculiar dynamics that gave rise to Qoheleth's idiolect cannot be fully understood outside their proper historical context. The phenomena and characteristics described above all seem to reflect a Hellenistic zeitgeist.