Thank you for differentiating modern from Biblical Hebrew. I'm learning to better understand scripture, but we have had dreams of visiting Israel someday, so it is nice to have some sense of what it might take to speak it in the modern setting.
Nice! Very helpful to understand Hebrew, especially your additional information with biblical and modern equivalent. One question לאילו I got the prefix lamed but why there is a yod in it?
Sorry for the late reply! It does seem that the word is eilu, meaning these. The 'ei' can be spelled with a yod, though normally it's not. May I ask where that passage is from?
@@truthseeker9070 Interesting. I think that when it was written then, the word eilu was a newer word, and so perhaps the spelling had not yet been solidified.
@@amichayr3418 They're modern in the sense that they weren't around when the Bible was written. Also, on this channel I'm not focusing on the Hebrew of the rabbinical writings, just Biblical and Modern. :)
This is great ! Thanks
Thank you for the clear explanations you give!
Thank you sir you are good explaning Hibrew and English mix ❤
Thank you, I'm glad this helped you! :)
Wow! You did a superb job at explaining this topic in a clear, concise, and thorough manner!
I'm very glad to hear that! Thanks for commenting!
Thank you for todays video!
@@askadia You're welcome! 😁
Great teaching!
Thank you! :)
Thank you for differentiating modern from Biblical Hebrew. I'm learning to better understand scripture, but we have had dreams of visiting Israel someday, so it is nice to have some sense of what it might take to speak it in the modern setting.
You're welcome, and thanks for the feedback!
Wonderful explained ❤
Thank you so much!
Thank you, it was well explained. 😊
You're welcome! I'm glad you enjoyed it! :)
thank you.
You're very welcome! :)
Wow, that was really helpful!
@@noranawman9869 I'm very glad to hear that! Thanks for commenting! :)
Nice! Very helpful to understand Hebrew, especially your additional information with biblical and modern equivalent.
One question
לאילו
I got the prefix lamed
but why there is a yod in it?
Thank you!
Good question, I think that might be a different word. If you could provide me with the context, I can confirm if that's the case. :)
@@LearnTheLingo_Hebrew הרשעים ותנסה לאילו שאומרים
Sorry for the late reply! It does seem that the word is eilu, meaning these. The 'ei' can be spelled with a yod, though normally it's not. May I ask where that passage is from?
@@LearnTheLingo_Hebrew this is from the scroll of secrets
@@truthseeker9070 Interesting. I think that when it was written then, the word eilu was a newer word, and so perhaps the spelling had not yet been solidified.
It's funny calling אלו and זו "modern"
When they both have been used since the mishna
@@amichayr3418 They're modern in the sense that they weren't around when the Bible was written. Also, on this channel I'm not focusing on the Hebrew of the rabbinical writings, just Biblical and Modern. :)
wonderful, but i never heart ei-le, but ele
A lot of people transliterate the tsere as 'e', as well as the segol, but I write the tsere as 'ei' since they have different sounds.
You must speak slowly, too fast,
Thank you for the feedback, I'll try to keep that in mind. :)
you can change the speed in the configuration in the video itself