עצם – bone – actually – essence
(you can check your pronunciation with the gadget below).
[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/לסדר-את-החדר-1.m4a” /]לְסַדֵּר אֶת הַחֶדֶר While English-speaking parents (especially North Americans) might tell their children to clean their rooms, Israeli parents would tell them to tidy or organize their rooms – לסדר את החדר[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/לסדר-את-החדר-1.m4a” /] – literally, to tidy the room. For example: [audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/לסדר-את-החדר-2.m4a” /]תסדרי את החדר לפני שאני אתעצבן! Clean (tidy, organize) your room before I get upset!…
having trouble seeing the print? יְמִינָה, שְׂמֹאלָה Check Out Our Elections Vocab Builder This post will help you understand directions given to you, as well as provide them yourself when asked in Israel. It’s material we empower our students with in our Level 1 class. We saw last week that the Hebrew terms for right and left are יָמִין and שְׂמֹאל, respectively. That’s right and left by themselves. But when…
לְאַתֵּר If you’ve been following קצת עברית (Ktzat Ivrit) for a while, you likely know the word for site – אֲתָר (ah-TAHR). The word is borrowed from Aramaic, creating a synonym for מָקוֹם (mah-KOHM) – place. To refer to a website in Hebrew, you’d say אֲתָר אִינְטֶרְנֶט (ah-TAHR EEN-tehr-net). To locate something or someone is לְאַתֵּר (le-ah-TEHR)….
[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/חיבור-1.m4a” /]חִבּוּר This week we’ve seen a bunch of Hebrew words formed from the root ח.ב.ר[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/חיבור-2.m4a” /] meaning connection. But what’s the word for that deepest of human experiences, connection itself? The word is חיבור, as in: [audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/חיבור-3.m4a” /]יש לנו חיבור טוב. We have a good connection. חיבור also refers to connection in the technical sense,…
[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/גז-טבעי-#.m4a” /]גַּז טִבְעִי The Hebrew word for gas is easy enough: גז[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/גז-טבעי-#.m4a” /]. And it turns out that both gas and גז derive from the word chaos – since gas is made up of atoms with a chaotic arrangement. Natural gas is גז טבעי[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/גז-טבעי-#.m4a” /], since טבע[audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/גז-טבעי-#.m4a” /] means nature. For example: [audioclip url=”https://archive.ulpan.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/גז-טבעי-#.m4a” /]לישראל יש מאגרים ענקיים…