Hebrew Vowels - No. 5
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- Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
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00:10 Consonants and vowels
02:17 The Mater Lectionis
03:57 The Alèph and the Ayin
07:35 The different modes of writing
07:54 The Masoretic system
08:45 The vowel « a »
Qamatz / קָמָץ
Pata’h / פַּתָח
'Hataf Pata’h / חֲַָטַָף פַָתַח
09:13 The vowel « é »
Tséré / צֵירֵה
Ségol / סֶגוֹל
'Hataf Ségol / חֲַָטַָף סֵגוֹל
09:23 The vowel « i »
'Hiriq / חִירִיק
'Hiriq Yod / חִירִיק יוֹד
09:34 The vowel « o »
'Holam / חוֹלָם
'Holam Vav / חוֹלָם וָו
Qamatz / קָמָץ
'Hataf Qamatz / חֲַָטַָף קָמַץ
09:58 The vowel « ou »
Qouboutz / קֻבּוּץ
Shourouk / שׁוּרוּק
10:13 The particularity of shéva / שְׁוָא
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Description:
In this video, we introduce the vowels in Hebrew. There are two ways to indicate vowels. The first is the Mater lectionis system and the second is the Masoretic system which is found especially in biblical texts.
Wishing you a good viewing.
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Without vowel sounds no consonant can be spoken
Yes, you are right, but there is also the case where a consonant can connect to another consonant, and in this case, it will carry a sheva. More precisely, the sheva is sometimes pronounced and sometimes silent. In this case, it "transfers" to the next letter.
This phenomenon exists in other languages, particularly in English, where some consonants are not followed by a vowel and directly link to the next letter.
Let’s take the example of the word "transport."
In common pronunciation, the "t" is silent, meaning it is not followed by an audible vowel.
Additionally, the "s" is immediately followed by the "p," with no vowel in between.
Other English words illustrate this phenomenon:
"script" → The "p" is immediately followed by the "t," with no intermediate vowel.
"construct" → The "n" is followed by the "s," then the "t," forming a consonant cluster without an audible vowel.
"explain" → The "x" (which is pronounced "ks") is a combination of "k" and "s," where the "s" follows directly without a vowel.
This type of consonant cluster is comparable to the behavior of the sheva in Hebrew: when a consonant connects to another without an intermediate vowel, the sheva may either be silent or pronounced, depending on the phonetic rules of the language.
thank you. This video helped a lot for review. Having it explained like this made "things" click together. Sorry this comment is a little vague, I guess you'll have to watch it to see what I mean.
Thank you so much for your feedback! I'm thrilled that the video was helpful and helped clarify some points. Feel free to ask any specific questions if there's anything that needs further explanation-I’d be happy to help.