make the Hebrew you learned this week YOURS TO KEEP

make the Hebrew you learned this week YOURS TO KEEP

חֹמֶר לְשִׁנּוּן Review Material   Can’t read Hebrew yet? You spent time on your Hebrew this week.   Use these review materials to make it yours to keep.   Flashcards   Game   Test       שַׁבָּת שָׁלוֹם, וְסוֹף שָׁבוּעַ נָעִים! Shabbat Shalom, and have a nice weekend!  

how to say “window” (literal and proverbial) in Hebrew

  חַלּוֹן, צֹהַר   Can’t read Hebrew yet?     The Hebrew word for the physical window found on the sides of homes and buildings is חַלּוֹן  . Though חלון is a masculine noun, it looks feminine in the plural: מַעֲרֶכֶת הַהַפְעָלָה שֶׁל מִיקְרוֹסוֹפט נִקְרֵאת “חַלּוֹנוֹת.” Microsoft’s operating system is called Windows.     חלון also means…

how to say “universe” in Hebrew

how to say “universe” in Hebrew

  יְקוּם   Can’t read Hebrew yet?     Biblical Hebrew uses the word יְקוּם   to mean substance or existence – coarsely, stuff.   For example, in the story of the Flood, G-d says:   …וּמָחִיתִי אֶת כָּל הַיְּקוּם אֲשֶׁר עָשִׂיתִי מֵעַל פְּנֵי הָאֲדָמָה… …and I will wipe out all the substance that I made from the…

how to say “transition” in Hebrew

  מַעֲבָר   Can’t read Hebrew yet?     Getting back to the routine is a transition.   The Hebrew word for transition is מַעֲבָר  . It literally means passage, as a transition is a passage from one state of being to another.   For example:   יֵשׁ שְׁלֹשָׁה מַעֲבָרֵי גְּבוּל בֵּין יִשְׂרָאֵל לְיַרְדֵּן. There are three border…

how to say “human nature” in Hebrew

  טֶבַע הָאָדָם, הַטֶּבַע הָאֱנוֹשִׁי   Can’t read Hebrew yet?     In observance of the Jewish holidays, I took off some time from blogging. Now it’s back to the routine, with a dose of Hebrew that brings themes of the holidays together with themes of the Torah portions being read these weeks by Jews around…

how to say “decoration” in Hebrew

  קִשּׁוּט   Can’t read Hebrew yet?     The Hebrew word for to decorate first appears in the Mishnah, where it refers to people adorning themselves, using the reflexive verb לְהִתְקַשֵּׁט  .   Since then, the word has taken on the meaning of decorating objects as well, employing the active-intensive verb, לְקַשֵּׁט  .    The word…

how to say “fruit” in Hebrew

  פְּרִי   Can’t read Hebrew yet?     The Hebrew word for fruit very closely resembles the English word, though the Online Etymological Dictionary doesn’t see the connection. The Hebrew word is פְּרִי  , and like in English, is used both literally:   תַּפּוּחַ הוּא פְּרִי. An apple is a fruit.     and figuratively:…

how to say “done deal!” in Hebrew

סָגוּר! Can’t read Hebrew yet?   סָגוּרmeans literally closed, but it is also used informally to mean decided and confirmed, as in:   אָז נִפָּגֵשׁ בִּשְׂדֵה הַתְּעוּפָה. סָגוּר! So we’ll meet at the airport. Done deal!   As does its English equivalent, !סגור comes from the business expression לִסְגּוֹר עִסְקָה – to close a deal   …

how to say “sailor” in Hebrew

מַלָּח   Can’t read Hebrew yet? The Hebrew word for sailor, appearing already in Biblical Hebrew, is מַלָּח   For example:   הַמַּלָּחִים עוֹבְדִים עַל הַסְּפִינָה. The sailors are working on the ship.   With an ah-AH vowel sequence and an emphasized second root letter, מַלָּח follows the sound pattern of the names of other professionals,…