how to say “shopping” in Hebrew

 

having trouble seeing the print?

קְנִיּוֹת
Conversational-Hebrew classes in

Jerusalem – Tel Aviv
RBS – Rehovot – everywhere else

Whereas שׁוֹפִּינְגis still the term that refers to that activity that my mother loves so much, shopping for clothes, Israelis call general shopping – like for food and electronics – קְנִיּוֹת.

גרפיטי "קנה פחות חיה יותר"
קְנֵה פָּחוֹת, חְיֵה יוֹתֵר
buy less, live more
(picture taken at a bus stop in Tel Aviv)

For example:

עָשִׂיתִי קְנִיּוֹת אֶתְמוֹל בַּסּוּפֶּר.

I went (literally, did) shopping yesterday at the supermarket.

קניות comes from the active-simple פָּעַל verb, לִקְנוֹת, which means, in Modern Hebrew, to buy or to purchase (in Biblical and Mishnaic Hebrew, it also means to possess).

A single act of purchasing is a קְנִיָּה, in Modern Hebrew (in Rabbinic literature, this is a קִנְיָן).

For example:


אֶתְמוֹל עָשִׂיתִי קְנִיָּה גְּדוֹלָה.עַכְשָׁיו יֵשׁ מַסְפִּיק אֹכֶל.

Yesterday I made a big purchase. Now there’s plenty of (literally, enough) food.

From the same root of ק.נ.ה, a shopping mall is a קַנְיוֹן.

 

Further build your Hebrew vocabulary with…
with a special discount for YDDH enthusiasts like yourself

Similar Posts