A. A. There isn’t a language as Lebanese, Lebanese people speaks Arabic as well. And, yes! Hebrew is definitely closer to Aramaic as it derived from it to begin with
@@HaiderAlZubaidi Hebrew didn't exactly derive from Aramaic, but the two languages are both members of the Northwest Semitic language family, while Arabic is from a separate branch. However, all three are Central West Semitic languages, and you're right in another sense; modern Hebrew square script was adopted from Imperial Aramaic and eventually replaced the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet as the primary form of written Hebrew following the Babylonian captivity and the colonization by the Assyrians of ancient Israel and Judah.
@@ronkalinovsky6898 Well that makes sense...The Towel of Babel and that darn Nimrod and his scheming. We could’ve all been writing in paleo Hebrew if it weren’t for that whippersnapper
Please consider creating and uploading new videos on building our own Hebrew sentences. I know you have shared a lot of phrases to memorize, and I commend you for that, but I like building blocks, not action figures. I want every possible lesson for building sentences fluently with correct conjugation, punctuation, and tenses from preschool level up to college level.
The original Hebrew started out as VSO and evolved into a SVO language over time. Then, it stopped being a living language but continued to be used as a literary language and occasionally in speech between Jews of different linguistic backgrounds.
Very clear. The discussion on saying questions, however, could have been better handled by explaining changes in intonation rather than saying it's difficult. Changes in intonation play a role in many languages including English to distinguish a statement from a question.
This is very interesting thanks :-) quick question though: what is the main difference between using אכל and אוכל for saying someone is eating? It looks like both can be used for food and to say someone is eating, but is there a distinction between them?
Thanks :-) does that affect the spelling though? Does אכל always mean eat and אוכל always mean food, as it looks like they can be used interchangeably?
Gotcha. I was checking because the spelling used in the video was אכל and the way I've heard it was spelt was אוכל. I know many words and concepts in English can be written different ways and have different words with the same meaning - its just that those two are so similarly spelt I wondered if they are just variants on how the word is pronounced or separate words
Well, the Hebrew grammar that excludes 'am', 'are', 'a', 'is', 'am a', etc and forms the 'subject, verb, object' grammar is pretty similar to that to Russian and Chinese grammar.
there are many different word constructions that can be use, but they slightly change the meaning of the sentence and the level of speech used. Also, if you use a suffix to signify the subject, it will be at the end of the verb in which case you are right. But the most basic form of modern Hebrew is, like they said in the video, SVO.
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Because I speak Arabic, Hebrew feels very easy for me :)
A. A. There isn’t a language as Lebanese, Lebanese people speaks Arabic as well. And, yes! Hebrew is definitely closer to Aramaic as it derived from it to begin with
@@HaiderAlZubaidi Hebrew didn't exactly derive from Aramaic, but the two languages are both members of the Northwest Semitic language family, while Arabic is from a separate branch. However, all three are Central West Semitic languages, and you're right in another sense; modern Hebrew square script was adopted from Imperial Aramaic and eventually replaced the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet as the primary form of written Hebrew following the Babylonian captivity and the colonization by the Assyrians of ancient Israel and Judah.
@@ronkalinovsky6898 Well that makes sense...The Towel of Babel and that darn Nimrod and his scheming. We could’ve all been writing in paleo Hebrew if it weren’t for that whippersnapper
Is the grammar the same? I know arabic aswell in syria
@@karatewithelian9014 Yes, the grammar is almost identical to Arabic
Ani Lokesh this is easy to learn Hebrew sentences.Thank you both of you.
The method of teaching very clear and easy
Thx God bless
Thank you. There is still a long way left but with the help of God.., Let’s hope
For both of you Congratulations!!!!.... Shalom. Todah for the Grammar Lesson of Hebrew. I like it.
Toda both ladies making gammar easy and simple. ❤❤❤
I'm glad Hebrew is Svo like English.
@@ethan8348 you're saying that it's not?
@@ethan8348 in what earth this is a joke?
Whose Ehtan?
תודה. אני תלמיד.
כל הכבוד!
It's really useful, thanks :)
Please consider creating and uploading new videos on building our own Hebrew sentences.
I know you have shared a lot of phrases to memorize, and I commend you for that, but I like building blocks, not action figures. I want every possible lesson for building sentences fluently with correct conjugation, punctuation, and tenses from preschool level up to college level.
^^^
Toda grammar very articulate Alisha/Idit😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
GOD bless you good job
Good class. 👏👏👍👍
Great lesson! Thanks!
Wow thank you im from philipines
Super są te prezentacje, pozdrawiam!
Beautiful and Perfect.
very good easy to understand Thanks a lot
very good easy Abba bless you
Who else is here from Duolingo? It got me pretty far but lacks in teaching grammar
Shalon. Are you angels o just a teacher?👼🙏👍
Very good, this lesson.
The original Hebrew started out as VSO and evolved into a SVO language over time. Then, it stopped being a living language but continued to be used as a literary language and occasionally in speech between Jews of different linguistic backgrounds.
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Thank you so much for your videos! They are such a blessing for me trying to connect with my Jewish roots.
Very clear. The discussion on saying questions, however, could have been better handled by explaining changes in intonation rather than saying it's difficult. Changes in intonation play a role in many languages including English to distinguish a statement from a question.
Just to be clear this was a sarcastic statement in the video.
I love this class
Thank you, but i can't read without Nikud, may you put in the Nikud
Me too, good idea put in the nikud
Will hebrew be easier for me because i know arabic? Are they related or not?
This is very interesting thanks :-) quick question though: what is the main difference between using אכל and אוכל for saying someone is eating? It looks like both can be used for food and to say someone is eating, but is there a distinction between them?
ochel with the first syllable stressed is food, and with the last syllable stressed it's eating
Thanks :-) does that affect the spelling though? Does אכל always mean eat and אוכל always mean food, as it looks like they can be used interchangeably?
It's possible to spell food as אכל, but the most common way is to spell both food and eating as אוכל
Gotcha. I was checking because the spelling used in the video was אכל and the way I've heard it was spelt was אוכל. I know many words and concepts in English can be written different ways and have different words with the same meaning - its just that those two are so similarly spelt I wondered if they are just variants on how the word is pronounced or separate words
Oh sorry I didn't understand you. אכל is אוכל in past tense. My bad
Tq frm India
If you're a Jedi, then the sentence structure is Object Subject Verb.
Jsjsjs
awesome video. It shows I am doing it right.
Todah Rabah :)
at the minute 5:46 instead to use the word lastly...is indicated to use finally? love you
Thank you!
please help me understand that the word structure in Malachi 3:8 in the Masoretic Text starts with a verb, Subject, Object.
it is vary hard for me but my dad is Hebrew
Well, the Hebrew grammar that excludes 'am', 'are', 'a', 'is', 'am a', etc and forms the 'subject, verb, object' grammar is pretty similar to that to Russian and Chinese grammar.
That’s the verb “to be” :)
The question form have no difficulty, it's equal in Portuguese
muito bom
Ha-im is actually used more often in modern day Hebrew than people realize.
only in formal situation, 'IM' ("if", conditional) is very common, but HA'IM isn't really used too often in spoken dialect
Toda raba
very very good
Good eveng
Shuper kuul
toda gvirit
אנ׳ אוהב חתול׳ם!
Then what is aahava
🥰🥰🥰
☝☝☝☝☝☝🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Bon fais moi vivre cette contestation en français au plus tôt que anglais j'aime pas anglais
Hebrew word construction is not Subjetc, verb, object. But, verb, subject and object
Zautea Jongte modern hebrew is Subject Verb and Object.
Thanks for enriching my knowlegde. commented from Biblical Hebrew background
you can use only verb and object sometimes, in literature (such as the bible) it is sometimes VSO
there are many different word constructions that can be use, but they slightly change the meaning of the sentence and the level of speech used. Also, if you use a suffix to signify the subject, it will be at the end of the verb in which case you are right. But the most basic form of modern Hebrew is, like they said in the video, SVO.
i disliked the video because you can't not love dogs, you must love them. Dogs are life, dogs are love
x2
Why doesn't *Alisha* speak Hebrew? 🤔
ها يلد اوحيف كلافيم
Lehitorat
? Kal
Galician grammers translation
How to offer a banking deal in Hebrew?
No offense, just jokes haha
totally wrong. It's VSO, Verb, Subject Object in THE Original Hebrew. You guys are Modern Hebrew teachers.
Why is the host there!No need.
Are you allowed to call it Hebrew ? Because it's modern hebrew not the real one
Yes. Same as cell phone is just a phone these days