how to say “dead end” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? לְלֹא מוֹצָא Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program:  LOCAL courses in Israel  DISTANCE courses online Yesterday we saw the Hebrew expression for point of departure – נְקֻדַּת מוֹצָא.  דֶּרֶךְ לְלֹא מוֹצָא dead-end road The Hebrew term for a dead end – a point without departure or a place with no way out – is מָקוֹם…

how to say “to blink” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? לְמַצְמֵץ Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program:  LOCAL courses in Israel  DISTANCE courses online The ancient Hebrew word for to peek is לְהָצִיץ, as in: הִנֵּה זֶה עוֹמֵד, אַחַר כָּתְלֵנוּ מַשְׁגִּיחַ מִן הַחַלֹּנוֹת, מֵצִיץ מִן הַחֲרַכִּים (שִׁיר הַשִּׁירִים ב:ט) Here he stands beyond our wall, watching from the windows, peeking through…

how to say “point of departure” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? נְקֻדַּת מוֹצָא Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program:  LOCAL courses in Israel  DISTANCE courses online The Hebrew root י.צ.א (y.ts.a), meaning exiting, gave rise to many words throughout Hebrew’s history. One of these words is that of origin as well as that which has exited/departed – מוֹצָא, which, in Modern Hebrew, has also…

how to say “a wink” in Hebrew

having trouble seeing the print? קְרִיצַת עַיִן Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program:  LOCAL courses in Israel  DISTANCE courses online Yesterday I introduced the Hebrew word for to blink – לְמַצְמֵץ. I mentioned that that word has a synonym, לִקְרוֹץ.  But whereas למצמץ meaning to blink is a modern creation from the Biblical-Hebrew word להציץ(to peek), a form…

how to say “escalation” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? הַסְלָמָה Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program   this week’s video In light of this past week’s events in southern Israel and Gaza, coupled with the appearance of the mystical, prophetic Jacob’s ladder – סֻלַּם יַעֲקֹב – appearing in the Torah portion to be read this Shabbat by Jews around the…

how to say “long-term” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? אֲרֹךְ-טְוָח Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program With the military operation in Gaza that has just come to an end, Israel sought an end to the barrage of missiles and rockets not just for the next few months, but for the long term. The Hebrew expression for long-term is אֲרֹךְ טְוָח,…

how to say “emergency” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? חֵרוּם Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program The Hebrew word for emergency is חֵרוּם. It first appears in recorded Hebrew in the Talmud, in the expression: בִּשְׁעַת חֵרוּם at a time of emergency  Other Hebrew expressions used regularly today are: מַצָּב חֵרוּם an emergency situation בְּמִקְרֶה חירום in case of emergency…

how to say “an alarm” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? אַזְעָקָה Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program An alarm is something that sounds a warning. Modern Hebrew uses the Biblical root ז.ע.ק (z.a.k) meaning crying out, invoking the Aramaic form of the abstract noun of the active-causative הִפְעִיל verb form to create the word אַזְעָקָה. For example: אַזְעָקוֹת נִשְׁמְעוּ לְלֹא…

how to say “incessantly” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? לְלֹא הֶרֶף Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program Last week we saw the Hebrew expressions for consistently. “יְשוּעַת הַשֵּׁם כְּהֶרֶף עַיִן” “Divine salvation is as the blink of an eye.” Another useful expression is that for incessantly or continuously: לְלֹא הֶרֶף. The word הֶרֶף in this expression appears in Biblical Hebrew, where…

how to say “consistently” in Hebrew

  having trouble seeing the print? בְּעִקְבִיּוּת Check out our world-class  conversational Hebrew program The root of the words having to do with consistency – ע.ק.ב (a.k.b), meaning heel – appears for the first time in the Torah portion to be read this Shabbat by Jews around the world, in which the third forefather, יַעֲקֹב (Jacob), in introduced.  There are several…