how to say “goggles” in Hebrew

משקפת שחייה   This one’s also a request. A few days ago I wrote about the word for swimming – שְׂחִיָּה (se-khee-YAH).   You may know the word for glasses – מִשְׁקָפַיִם (meesh-kah-FAH-yeem). The root of the word is ש.ק.פ (sh.k.f), whose core meaning is clarity and transparency. A verb of that root is לְהַשְׁקִיף (le-hahsh-KEEF)…

how to say “to swim the crawl” in Hebrew

לשחות חתירה   To swim, in Hebrew, is לִשְׂחוֹת (lees-KHOHT). The act of swimming is שְׂחִיָּה (skhee-YAH).   To row or to paddle is לַחְתּוֹר (lahkh-TOHR). The act of rowing or paddling – or swimming the crawl (which resembles rowing in its movement) is חֲתִירָה (khah-tee-RAH).       For example… אֲנִי אוֹהֵב לִשְׂחוֹת חֲתִירָה (ah-NEE oh-HEV lees-KHOT khah-tee-RAH) – I…

how (and why) to say “bicycle” in Hebrew

אופניים   This one’s for Maurice – thanks for the request!   I explained this to Caron’s Level 4 class last week, I believe, when I was substituting.   The Hebrew word for bicycle is אוֹפַנַּים (oh-fah-NAH-yeem).    Why?   While Modern Hebrew (going on Medieval) renders a wheel a גַּלְגָּל (gahl-GAHL), the Biblical Hebrew word for…

how to say “logical” in Hebrew

הגיוני   In English, to think is a general term, while to ponder, to contemplate, to surmise, etc. are related to thinking but are more specific.    Hebrew works the same way, with לַחְשׁוֹב (lahkh-SHOHV) meaning to think, and other words denoting something more specific. For example, the Biblical and Modern Hebrew לַהֲגוֹת (lah-hah-GOHT) means to pronounce, but…