 loading
 loadingCopyright 2015 Yale University. All rights reserved. As of July 1, 2015, the Yale Alumni Magazine operates as a department of Yale University. Earlier print and digital content of the Yale Alumni Magazine was published and copyrighted by Yale Alumni Publications, Inc., and is used under license.


 5 comments
 5 comments Print
 Print Email
 Email
5 comments
- 
 
Jeremy Bates, 10:05am October 07 2016 |  Flag as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
  
- 
 
Michael Lazare,  2:22pm October 07 2016 |  Flag as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
  
- 
 
Michael Lazare,  2:23pm October 07 2016 |  Flag as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
  
- 
 
Jeremy Bates,  5:20pm October 07 2016 |  Flag as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
  
- 
 
Michael Lazare,  8:28pm October 07 2016 |  Flag as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
  
The comment period has expired.Perhaps not cherubim, but cherubs?
Nope .Plural of cherus is cherubim.
Finger slipped. Plural of cherub is cherubim.
My point was not grammatical; I think there's a category mistake here.
If the carving were of many-eyed, Hebrew-Bible cherubim, you of course would be correct.
This sculpture, however, shows Renaissance putti. Ezekiel reported nothing of this kind.
Hence cherubs.
I bow to your erudition. I was thinking of grammar.