Portfolio
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Writing

Samples

A show of my writing. 300 words,
different styles—enjoy!
Sample No.1

Copywriting

Onepager for an AI-driven SaaS offering traffic enforcement solutions.


The Future Of
Traffic Enforcement

Is your agency bogged down with the hassle and inefficiency of manual traffic control methods? Make the move to the cutting edge of government traffic enforcement: our state-of-the-art SaaS platform automatically detects traffic violations using camera surveillance, utilizing cutting-edge AI algorithms to locate violators and issue fines automatically.
It’s not just about enforcement: we offer valuable insights and data analysis capabilities that allow governments to identify problem areas and take targeted action to reduce accidents and improve traffic flow. 

Our SaaS services allow agencies to make the move to unmanned traffic enforcement, increasing revenue through automatic fine issuance. Not only does this save time and resources for your agency, it also promotes safer roadways for all citizens. 


Turnkey Solution

Our powerful, user-friendly platform and dedicated customer support team allow you to implement our turnkey solution in no time, and our experienced staff will train your personnel to make your transition into the new era of bureaucracy seamless. With our AI-powered SaaS solution, the future of efficient traffic enforcement is within reach. 


Our commitment to ensuring privacy, security and compliance makes us the best option for any government authority—whether national, regional, or municipal. Give your agency the tools it needs to efficiently enforce traffic laws with our innovative SaaS solution.

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More samples below!

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Sample no. 2

Creative Writing

From a personal Facebook post.


 

CREATIVE Writing

From a personal Facebook post.

Fall has officially entered Jerusalem. Mornings are chilly, days warm, and evenings bring back a cold breeze. Today marks the start of my graduate studies, and a program I’ve hoped for and looked forward to for two years. It also marks the end of my undergraduate, as I’ve finally received my bachelor’s certificate today. I find myself episodically overcome with gratitude, realizing that I’m living the dream I’ve been longing to fulfill for a long time: Living in Israel, studying the Hebrew Bible and Semitic languages, as well as the history of my people. Living my life in Hebrew and in a place where I feel more at home than any other place I’ve been. Getting here was the hardest thing I’ve had to do, and by far the most rewarding.

Of course, credit is due. I owe a great debt to the State of Israel for accepting me as a citizen, to Israeli taxpayers for subsidizing my education, and my ever-supportive mother for having always encouraged me to go my own way. To many grueling challenges that have made me a stronger and more capable version of myself. To the Thanks To Scandinavia Foundation for graciously entrusting me with a scholarship reducing my tuition costs from five figures to zero. To God for lighting my way on and off the beaten path, providing a consistent influx of amazing coincidences that crush my intermittent doubts in the divine.

The above picture displays the view from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. You are looking out over Israel, through the Palestinian West Bank and into Jordan (though the haze blocks Jordan). Let it be a vision of a future where we let our similarities unite us and our differences enrich us. The very real condition is that, for better or worse (I’d like to think mostly for better), we’re stuck with each other.

Let’s make the best of it.


 

Academic | Linguistics

From my B.A. paper, ‘Scope Effects on Linearization in Polysynthetic Languages’.

Having reviewed basic concepts above, the current section aims to delineate the mechanics of syntactic derivation. At this stage in the discussion, the three components of semantics, morphology, and syntax converge. First, rudimentary syntactic operations will be described. Syntactic Merge was suggested in the Minimalist Program (Chomsky, 1993, 1995) as the principal syntactic operation that concatenates lexical items after their retrieval from the lexicon. The operation is understood to pair elements in a binary fashion, merging two new items for every new iteration, ultimately yielding the type of structure featured in the above schemata. Widely sanctioned within the literature, this notion was embodied in Kayne's (1984) Binarity Principle, which stipulates that a binary-branching structure would be superior to n-ary branching in terms of computational efficiency.

 

Further, Merge is argued to apply in a ‘bottom-up’ manner, i.e. it begins by merging lexical items which occur at the bottom end of the syntax. The requisite for a bottom-up approach follows from the Binarity Principle. To illustrate why this is, consider (2.2.7a). A top-down application of Merge would entail an initial merger of Jack with bought. By the Headedness Principle, this maximal projection would need to be headed either by Jack or bought. However, Jack bought is invalid as a DP maximal projection, and since buy is a transitive verb, (2.2.7b) is equally invalid as a VP maximal projection. We must instead assume that the initial merger corresponds to that shown in (2.2.7c).

(2.2.7) a. Jack bought a candle.
b. bought a candle
c. a candle

 

Academic | Bible studies

From a paper on similarities between Deuteronomy and the Esarhaddon Treaty.

Deuteronomy distinguishes itself from the previous books of the Hebrew Bible in many ways, including its language, content, and structure. It is formulaic, legalistic, and (largely) personally addresses the people of Israel in the second person as Moses delivers his speeches at Mount Moab. Deuteronomy gives the impression of having been conceived in the Kingdom of Judah for a number of reasons, one being the fact that Moses' speeches are reported to have been given ‘on the other side of the Jordan’ and before he himself dies. The book introduces a legal tradition that sets it apart from previous books in that it prescribes unequivocally Judean laws and ritual practices such as centralized sacrifice in Jerusalem (local shrines previously going free of condemnation) and turning Pesaḫ, Šavuot, and Sukkot into pilgrimage festivals. It contains religious, civil, and criminal law as well as regulations for how to run a government—laws which necessitate a state and are necessitated by a state.

 

Part of the legalistic format which sets Deuteronomy apart is found in its contractual form. The similarities in form and content between the Esarhaddon adê are striking to the point that it is difficult to argue against Deuteronomy being modeled on the adê. Many common literary motifs, outlined at length by Weinfeld (1972), include the list of maledictions which result from breaking the Law (a canonical component of Assyrian treaties), virtually identical to those of Esarhaddon's loyalty oaths and appearing in the same order. Their particular order is understood when put in their Assyrian context, as the punishments appear in connection with the Assyrian gods who exact them. When Assyrian gods are listed in Esarhaddon's treaty and other inscriptions, they appear as follows: Aššur, Ninlil, Sîn, and Šamaš, corresponding to their importance in the Assyrian pantheon (Sîn and Šamaš are occasionally in reversed order, but are brothers and thus of equal standing). In both the Esarhaddon adê and in Deuteronomy, the maledictions match this order, and they both warn of prophets and dream-diviners and who foment worship of other Gods or sovereigns (Deut. 13:1–6).

 

Design

PORTFOLIO

 

This page is under construction and more is to be added here momentarily.

 

Miscellaneous

Samples & Sketches

Some additional sketches, doodles, and works-in-progress.

(COMING SOON)

 

 
 

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More samples below!

Got distracted? Me too—I put this here to help your eyes relax.

Take a minute to write an introduction that is short, sweet, and to the point.