I never dreamt that I could learn Hebrew. With your tutorials, I have learned the Aleph bet, verb markings, and I can sound out words. I know I have a long way to go, but you have encouraged me to keep going. Thank you!!
Wow ... I have been self learning Hebrew for three years and your explanations were brilliant! Thank you. I am going to follow you now. Plus, I am a retired professor and your skills to include visual images is powerful! Good good good!
This is awesome!!!!!!! i have been taking many classes in Hebrew YOUR THE BEST!!!!!! TODA RABA!!!!! Your explanation is FANTASTIC!!!!!!SHALOM BSHEM YESHUA You need to get hold of some online Hebrew schools and teach!!! good teachers are hard to find teaching is a gift you can have the knowledge but some people just cant teach it well Adonai bless you!
Shalom, I've been trying to learn to read Biblical Hebrew for a number of years as part of my Bible studies. I just have a block when it comes to the vowels and I've gotten so frustrated. This is the BEST video on vowels I've seen. It is awesome!I WILL REVIEW OVER AND OVER AGAIN! I will share with many people! THANK YOU
Wow, I started learning the hebrew alphabet a week ago and I was getting more and more stressed over understanding it because it seemed so difficult just to learn reading basic sentences, but now watched your videos of the nikkud and the dagesh. Your explanations are insanely well done and structured and so much of my stress about learning this ancient script has been lifted. I will keep checking out all your Hebrew content. Thank you!
In the Philippines most people believes that it cannot be pronounced because it is just written in consonant letters only, without vowels. Some accused that vowels are added for malicious intent to change what are written in the Bible. Thank you for making a video like this to educate us about Hebrew. Your explanation is easy to catch up with good voice and accent to listen. It is very helpful to those who want to know about the vowel system used in Hebrew writings.
It takes a lot of time to put all the visuals and animations together, but yours have been the clearest learning tool as I start at the very beginning! Thanks for all your work to help others love their Hebrew!
Shalom, thanks for such explicit explanation about each of the vowels the way you’ve done it ! I’m totally convinced that Hebrew is a language I should be learning ever since I realize I been devoting my spare time to learn others languages instead.👍🏾
It was a great class! Despite I am a Native Spanish speaker, who also speaks English, I could catch up on all the concepts you taught on it. thanks for helping us to learn Hebrew ... Now, I'm watching my Hebrew lessons in Spanish (Sephardic Phonetics) and also in English (Askenatz Phonetics).
I love your videos! Thank you۔ I also want to say that I like listening to your voice because you sound like a vocal teacher that I listen to often۔ Thanks again
Interesting. I'm used to "ultra short" being called "half vowels." Also, I usually stick with the matres when I teach and then explain that the E and O came about as diphthongs with the A. That helps students understand at least some of the variances with vowel shortening and syllables. That said, this is a nice, clear presentation. I'm always looking for secondary videos to provide students as sometimes it's good to let them see various presentations before something clicks.
Thanks a million! This is the clearest explanation I've seen (and I've seen a bunch, lol). Finally giving up on trying to do without the niqud... 😱 Maybe I won't need them in a few years... God bless!
I am 72 now and living in England. I have quite an affinity with Israel although I am not very religious, Though I have had a keen interest in Israel for many years. With access to internet, I am able to catch up on all that had been a barrier until now. I am trying to learn Hebrew and hope that it is not too late late in my years to do so? Any advice would be very welcome. Thank you.
Do you know the other forms of vowel pointing that DID NOT stick and become popular? I am looking and cannot find the info. Thanks to anyone that can help!
Thank you so much, this is truly helpful. I want to learn Hebrew and this tutorial is mostly wonderful . I have a question: Can the sheva be used above a letter as in the YOD? which nikkud mark, besides the kholam can be use above a letter? Thank you
No, shva is always beneath the text. Only the holam is above. Many texts of the Bible also include other markings, known as cantillation marks, which aid in phrasing and singing the text. These sometimes resemble the nikkud, so it can be confusing for beginners.
I am learning a lot from your Biblical Hebrew lessons. Things are well explained. Thank you! I do have some questions, though. Ex: why does אָב have a long vowel when it looks like a Closed Syllable?
I’ve generalized the concept in the video for the sake of introducing the two basic types of syllables. There are many exceptions, often coordinated with stress: a closed, accented syllable often has a long vowel (as in אֶָב). And many open, accented syllables use short vowels (as in the first syllable of אֶרֶץ). You can find long explanations for these in grammars like Gesenius, but for most learners, a general sense of how to divide words into syllables is sufficient. Thanks for the question!
Thank you very much! I am studying Hebrew by myself and I have been looking for a explanation about which one of the dots or combination I should use when I write. I haven't found any explanation in a lot of videos and web pages I looked.
That's the easy part. The hard part is to read and write without the niqqud, and I'm looking everywhere and I can't find the information. Do you have a video on that
What about the two dots over the Shin. A dot on the top right says "Shin" and a dot on the top right says "Sin" but what about both. This has always confused me.
Sometimes this occurs when a shin is followed by a holam vowel (o sound). In that case, the dot on the right marks it as a shin, and the dot on the left is the vowel. The syllable is pronounced “sho”.
I’m not trying to sidetrack the lesson, but I have to wonder: with the explanation you gave about the disuse of a modified language once understood, WHY not put the vowels back in rather than inventing a new bunch of dots to do the job of vowels already invented? Seems a bit “off” to a rational mind. Lol. Oh, and I loved this lesson. Very very helpful!
Sorry if that was confusing... The vowels were never taken out. They were never there in the first place. Rather, Hebrew has always (generally speaking) used only the consonants in written language. Think of writing as a shorthand for spoken language. If we already know the language, consonants are enough to make meaning clear in most cases. t s nt vry hrd t rd wrds wtht vwls. So, the dots were invented as a kind of code to help readers who didn't already speak Hebrew (or who were just learning) to pronounce aloud a written consonantal text. It can be tricky to get the hang of it at first, but it's actually pretty ingenious!
Ahhhhhhhh! That’s what they are!!!! I’m a Yiddish new learner and even I kinda know the letters but I found it impossible to pronounce Hebrew and wondered why they don’t have vowels, and I was so confused with the dots and dashes, now I know!!!!
Tim please, I really need to ask you a question about something you just touched on & is extremely angering to me which I cannot really get a clear answer to. Thanks. Jennifer
Thanks for this video! It's a great help for studying Hebrew outside of my classes. (And I think it's very funny that the close captions say your name is "Tim McNinja")
Great video! Really well presented. I normally avoid Americans when learning a language, because they tend to pronounce everything really badly with a really heavy American accent. But from what I can tell, your accent doesn't seem too strong! :-)
Do you want volunteering for dubbing the content to spanish. Its so clear with the animations and is faster to learn! Thank God and Jesus and His Spirit! Thanks dude
I am curious as to how to pronounce The Alef with the 3 dots in an upside down configuration an then a line right next to it.... אֶֽ sorry it will not let me paste it any larger....
The little line is called a _meteg_. All it does (usually) is note that the syllable is stressed. Next to a _segol_ like your example, the vowel still makes an "eh" sound.
The little line is called a meteg. All it does (usually) is note that the syllable is stressed. Next to a segol, like your example, the vowel still makes an "eh" sound.
@@timmcninch now what letter would be assigned for the Alef … I keep writing it as an “A” I mean I know it is silent but then again the “A” is always silent in the English language… read, lead etc…
The alef is one of those “mothers”-an earlier way of marking the presence of the vowel sound before the invention of the dot system. The later system added the dots but did not replace the “mothers” already in the consonantal text.
Tim McNinch why is there no ultra short vowel for ''ee'' and ''ooh''? :):):):) I love hebrew and you bro! I can't read hebrew without niqqud! and what is the true spelling "niqqud" or "nikud" Wait you're so awesome and handsome bro!
I never dreamt that I could learn Hebrew. With your tutorials, I have learned the Aleph bet, verb markings, and I can sound out words. I know I have a long way to go, but you have encouraged me to keep going. Thank you!!
עֲלִיָה. 🎆
🤜💥🤛 I've recommended this channel quite a few times
Me too !
Aliyah
You are right.
Wow ... I have been self learning Hebrew for three years and your explanations were brilliant! Thank you. I am going to follow you now. Plus, I am a retired professor and your skills to include visual images is powerful! Good good good!
Born a gifted teacher! Keep the videos coming. Toda Raba, Tim!
This is awesome!!!!!!! i have been taking many classes in Hebrew YOUR THE BEST!!!!!! TODA RABA!!!!! Your explanation is FANTASTIC!!!!!!SHALOM BSHEM YESHUA You need to get hold of some online Hebrew schools and teach!!! good teachers are hard to find teaching is a gift you can have the knowledge but some people just cant teach it well Adonai bless you!
Shalom, I've been trying to learn to read Biblical Hebrew for a number of years as part of my Bible studies. I just have a block when it comes to the vowels and I've gotten so frustrated. This is the BEST video on vowels I've seen. It is awesome!I WILL REVIEW OVER AND OVER AGAIN! I will share with many people! THANK YOU
Thanks for the kind feedback! Hope you will check out my other Hebrew lessons!
Great teaching technique. Easy to understand. Nice, calming voice. The best! Thank you.
Wow, I started learning the hebrew alphabet a week ago and I was getting more and more stressed over understanding it because it seemed so difficult just to learn reading basic sentences, but now watched your videos of the nikkud and the dagesh. Your explanations are insanely well done and structured and so much of my stress about learning this ancient script has been lifted. I will keep checking out all your Hebrew content. Thank you!
In the Philippines most people believes that it cannot be pronounced because it is just written in consonant letters only, without vowels. Some accused that vowels are added for malicious intent to change what are written in the Bible. Thank you for making a video like this to educate us about Hebrew. Your explanation is easy to catch up with good voice and accent to listen. It is very helpful to those who want to know about the vowel system used in Hebrew writings.
Thank you for your crystal clear explanation about the Niqquda. Now I could understand more what I am trying to read 😅
תודה רבה ❤
It takes a lot of time to put all the visuals and animations together, but yours have been the clearest learning tool as I start at the very beginning! Thanks for all your work to help others love their Hebrew!
Amazing hebrew learning videos 👏 I enjoy them very much! Toda raba!!
Please continue to upload more! May God bless you!
very well explained. Thanks for your clear and simple way of teaching. May God bless you.
The explanations are brilliant.
Wow! Great teaching; this is something I can always go back to as needed and just keep on learning. Thanks
What can I say? Simply superb. I came across this channel by chance. I find the teaching skill of Tim outstanding. Thanks very much.
These videos are such a great quality and so helpful! Thank you!
mi too
This is a very clear teaching. Thank you!
ALL YOUR VIDEO ARE VERY HELPFUL TO ME. WATCHING THEM ALL OVER AGAIN AND AGAIN. THANK YOU SO MUCH. LOVE YOUR HEBREW.
Shalom, thanks for such explicit explanation about each of the vowels the way you’ve done it ! I’m totally convinced that Hebrew is a language I should be learning ever since I realize I been devoting my spare time to learn others languages instead.👍🏾
This video is in detail very informative which has answered my questions. Thanks for taking the time to make it and sharing it. ,👍❤️😊
Best explanation I've seen/heard so far !
Merci Beaucoup
I am starting the study of the language. It has been a myracle to found you. Todá rabá from Spain.
Your videos are exellent and above ALL the videos I have watched so far! Yishar Koah !!
Keep the great work going. How can I get in touch with you?
Tim, I teach basic Biblical HEBREW and your videos is sooo helpful and amazing! How you create this Black board lessons is astonishing!! Todah rabah!
בבקשה!
It was a great class! Despite I am a Native Spanish speaker, who also speaks English, I could catch up on all the concepts you taught on it. thanks for helping us to learn Hebrew ... Now, I'm watching my Hebrew lessons in Spanish (Sephardic Phonetics) and also in English (Askenatz Phonetics).
Excellent! Thank you, your videos are exceptionally well presented and clear!
I love your videos! Thank you۔ I also want to say that I like listening to your voice because you sound like a vocal teacher that I listen to often۔ Thanks again
Wonderful teaching. Thank You. Blessings.
Wonderfully Explained and thank you so much.. it helps me alot..
Interesting. I'm used to "ultra short" being called "half vowels." Also, I usually stick with the matres when I teach and then explain that the E and O came about as diphthongs with the A. That helps students understand at least some of the variances with vowel shortening and syllables. That said, this is a nice, clear presentation. I'm always looking for secondary videos to provide students as sometimes it's good to let them see various presentations before something clicks.
Super pedagogic and informative! Thank you!
What an excellent teacher. I love my Hebrew❤️
Thanks a million! This is the clearest explanation I've seen (and I've seen a bunch, lol). Finally giving up on trying to do without the niqud... 😱 Maybe I won't need them in a few years...
God bless!
I've never understood the sheva pronunciation. Thank you for explaining it. like hitting a brick wall. That really helped. Todah!
I am 72 now and living in England. I have quite an affinity with Israel although I am not very religious, Though I have had a keen interest in Israel for many years. With access to internet, I am able to catch up on all that had been a barrier until now. I am trying to learn Hebrew and hope that it is not too late late in my years to do so? Any advice would be very welcome. Thank you.
Do you know the other forms of vowel pointing that DID NOT stick and become popular? I am looking and cannot find the info. Thanks to anyone that can help!
Thank you so much, this is truly helpful. I want to learn Hebrew and this tutorial is mostly wonderful .
I have a question: Can the sheva be used above a letter as in the YOD? which nikkud mark, besides the kholam can be use above a letter? Thank you
No, shva is always beneath the text. Only the holam is above. Many texts of the Bible also include other markings, known as cantillation marks, which aid in phrasing and singing the text. These sometimes resemble the nikkud, so it can be confusing for beginners.
I am learning a lot from your Biblical Hebrew lessons. Things are well explained. Thank you!
I do have some questions, though. Ex: why does אָב have a long vowel when it looks like a Closed Syllable?
I’ve generalized the concept in the video for the sake of introducing the two basic types of syllables. There are many exceptions, often coordinated with stress: a closed, accented syllable often has a long vowel (as in אֶָב). And many open, accented syllables use short vowels (as in the first syllable of אֶרֶץ). You can find long explanations for these in grammars like Gesenius, but for most learners, a general sense of how to divide words into syllables is sufficient. Thanks for the question!
Thank you very much! I am studying Hebrew by myself and I have been looking for a explanation about which one of the dots or combination I should use when I write. I haven't found any explanation in a lot of videos and web pages I looked.
Glad it was helpful!
Incredibly good videos that I have watched more than once.
Thanks!
l love your teaching! Excellently understandable and fun.
are the vowels interchangeable? how do you know which one to use?
Well I have a doubt. Can I use niqqud on any alphabet or only on certain ones
This is beautiful and brilliant. Thanking you so much.
Excellent lesson...as always.
That's the easy part. The hard part is to read and write without the niqqud, and I'm looking everywhere and I can't find the information. Do you have a video on that
Thank you for short but detailed explanation
Excellent video !! This helped me to understand some pronunciations in kabbalistic texts. Thank you !!!
What about the two dots over the Shin. A dot on the top right says "Shin" and a dot on the top right says "Sin" but what about both. This has always confused me.
Sometimes this occurs when a shin is followed by a holam vowel (o sound). In that case, the dot on the right marks it as a shin, and the dot on the left is the vowel. The syllable is pronounced “sho”.
This is absolutely brilliant, well done.
I just found you! You’re awesome!!
do you have a longer series that I can follow as a first week learner?
This is great! Truly helpful. Thank you for this.
How do you say I love you God ..
El ohim? Please as he neither male nor female??
Kaleh kalot, thank you, brother Tim
I’m not trying to sidetrack the lesson, but I have to wonder: with the explanation you gave about the disuse of a modified language once understood, WHY not put the vowels back in rather than inventing a new bunch of dots to do the job of vowels already invented? Seems a bit “off” to a rational mind. Lol.
Oh, and I loved this lesson. Very very helpful!
Sorry if that was confusing... The vowels were never taken out. They were never there in the first place. Rather, Hebrew has always (generally speaking) used only the consonants in written language. Think of writing as a shorthand for spoken language. If we already know the language, consonants are enough to make meaning clear in most cases. t s nt vry hrd t rd wrds wtht vwls. So, the dots were invented as a kind of code to help readers who didn't already speak Hebrew (or who were just learning) to pronounce aloud a written consonantal text. It can be tricky to get the hang of it at first, but it's actually pretty ingenious!
Thanks a Lot. I am from Brazil and I am a very beginner in Hebrew.
What a great channel. I’m taking Hebrew I in seminary and this is great for review.
Ahhhhhhhh! That’s what they are!!!! I’m a Yiddish new learner and even I kinda know the letters but I found it impossible to pronounce Hebrew and wondered why they don’t have vowels, and I was so confused with the dots and dashes, now I know!!!!
Tim please, I really need to ask you a question about something you just touched on & is extremely angering to me which I cannot really get a clear answer to. Thanks.
Jennifer
Thank you very much from Portugal.
Great explainations !!! Thanks for sharing :-)
How do we know the difference between (ah) long sound and (oh) short sound?
The rule of thumb is: if it’s in a closed, unaccented syllable, it is kamats katan (oh); otherwise, regular kamats (ah).
@@timmcninch Thank you.
Thanks for this video! It's a great help for studying Hebrew outside of my classes. (And I think it's very funny that the close captions say your name is "Tim McNinja")
Ha! I should use that as a pen name!
If its not too much to ask could you please post the full text of this lesson somewhere so we can read it as well?
Great video! Really well presented. I normally avoid Americans when learning a language, because they tend to pronounce everything really badly with a really heavy American accent. But from what I can tell, your accent doesn't seem too strong! :-)
I appreciate your chart. it helps me to remember.
Thanks for sharing this teaching video
why is there no ultra short on column I and U
Hi, that was great! really tnx for your useful videos.😊
Shalom love your lessons
Do you want volunteering for dubbing the content to spanish. Its so clear with the animations and is faster to learn! Thank God and Jesus and His Spirit!
Thanks dude
Thank you for the offer! I may get around to doing this myself someday before long…
@@timmcninch i can do it for volunteering if you need. Its ok it helps people get closer to God if they decide to.
ויהי בימי שפט השפים ויהי רעב בארץ? What does that mean?
something like - "in the days of the judge of judges there was hunger in the land"
Thank you for this . Shalom Shabbat
Are you still teaching these series?
Long pause in the series as I work on some other vocational priorities. I’ll get back to it someday…
I am curious as to how to pronounce The Alef with the 3 dots in an upside down configuration an then a line right next to it.... אֶֽ sorry it will not let me paste it any larger....
The little line is called a _meteg_. All it does (usually) is note that the syllable is stressed. Next to a _segol_ like your example, the vowel still makes an "eh" sound.
The little line is called a meteg. All it does (usually) is note that the syllable is stressed. Next to a segol, like your example, the vowel still makes an "eh" sound.
@@timmcninch now what letter would be assigned for the Alef … I keep writing it as an “A” I mean I know it is silent but then again the “A” is always silent in the English language… read, lead etc…
I'M new comer, thanks for teaching
It’s amazing and very clear explanation
If "tsere" already is the "eh" sound in "ma-LEH" why write it with "Alef" consonant at the end?
The alef is one of those “mothers”-an earlier way of marking the presence of the vowel sound before the invention of the dot system. The later system added the dots but did not replace the “mothers” already in the consonantal text.
Love your teaching!
Thank you for the video… wish I found this earlier ❤️
Very very useful for me bro. Thank you
Tx for the introduction and where this came from 😀
A very clear explanation, nice
love your videos :)
thumbs up and shared :))
Amazing. Thank you!!!
Best Explanation ever
Thanks so much!
Tim McNinch why is there no ultra short vowel for ''ee'' and ''ooh''?
:):):):)
I love hebrew and you bro!
I can't read hebrew without niqqud!
and what is the true spelling "niqqud" or "nikud"
Wait you're so awesome and handsome bro!
Very helpful thank you!
why long A is exactly the same as short O? confusing.
Fantastic explanation.
Excellent!
Explain the marking above the letters
Thank you very much for this!
what does "kaleh kalote" mean?
“easy peasy”
That's amazing!!
Shalom 🕊
Thank you. Very nice.
Very good!
great work Tim