Bolozky, Shmuel and Michael Becker (2006) Living Lexicon of Hebrew Nouns. Ms., University of Massachusetts Amherst. Available at http://becker.phonologist.org/LLHN 2006: V1, first release. Sep 2024: V2, minor corrections in the CSV file. Columns in LLHN --------------- spelling.sg: The base form, as listed in the source dictionary (Even-Shoshan), augmented with spelling-based info (q=qof, $=sin, T=tet, `=ayn, '=alef, H=het). These are normative forms. root: The consonantal root as listed in the source dictionary (Even-Shoshan) root.heb: translation of the "root" column into Hebrew orthography etym: bh=biblical hebrew, mish=mishnaic hebrew, med=medieval hebrew, mh=modern hebrew, int=international (=non semitic) gender: f=feminine, fd=fem dual, fp=fem plural, m=masc, md=masc dual, mfp=masc or fem plural, mp=masc plural related.word: the occasional related word singular: The base form, in IPA. These forms are colloquial, and often deviate from the normative. CVskeleton: CV skeleton of the singular vowels: the vowels of the singular stress: "o" for a syllable that is either stressless or loses its stress in the plural, "x" for a stressed syllable that keeps its stress in the plural ("accented syllable"). Does not include furtive a, so "jadua" is coded "oo", not "ooo". plural: the colloquial plural form in IPA, if there is one plural.allomorph: the allmorph of the colloquial plural suffix, "im" or "ot" comment: marks words with a furtive a (like "jadua") and segholates (defined as having penult stress in the singular and final stress in the plural, which is a narrower definition than the traditional one). One item (dolar) is marked as having stress shift. dual: forms that have the -aim suffix (body parts and things that come in pairs) accent: empty for items with mobile stress, "x" for items with fixed stress