Hebrew Handwriting - Overview
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- Опубликовано: 5 апр 2018
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Todah! Your videos are very helpful!
Very useful for beginners. Thank you
Thank you for this video. Very helpful.
This was extremely helpful in helping me learn Hebrew cursive. At 4:28, when introducing the soft letters, 4 letters are written on the board but for some reason, only 2 are spoken. Any chance you could list here what the Soft letters you listed are from 4:28 to end? Thanks!
It’s Kaf כ , mem ם nun נ, pey פ and tsadi צ
Amei. . . Very good. . .
Thank you.
Good. I must learn the handwriting foŕm of this script.
Thank you
טוב מאוד
Òtimo vídeo.
almost looks like different language alphabet.
I have seen some Israelis use an X for aleph in script. I find it is quicker. Your thoughts please.
Hi Chad, it's not a good practice and it's more of a hack than proper writing. Although it's readable and it's easy to understand from the context that you meant to write א, we still recommend to write it properly :)
Thanks for the question
Should always write properly. No shortcuts.
Thank you. Be blessed
Why did you do me like that on פ 🤨 i need white out. 😝 thank you tho 🤗
Why didn’t the mem and the aleph just flip around in the script form because they look like they make more sense when you put the script mem with the aleph and the script aleph as the mem?
That’s an interesting perspective, never thought of it :)
Because it is not a random assignment. It goes back to the roots of ancient hebrew: Aramaic and Cananite!
www.jpost.com/Blogs/Torah-Commentaries/Metaphors-in-the-Torah-The-Ancient-Language-of-Paleo-Hebrew-392631
www.quora.com/How-are-the-Greek-and-Hebrew-alphabets-related
The letter Aleph for example is derived from an oxes´ head and the `horns´ are still there, when you write the handwritten Aleph! ;-)
You can write the letters in both ways, so why you don't write using the print form? It would be easier for everyone to read and write using just one form
My guess is that the "non-print" form on the second row is less time-consuming
As a scholar of Japanese, which involves writing over 2,000 Chinese characters (aka "kanji"), I can say that the printed Hebrew script is already simple and easy to write, so this idea that it's "more economic" to write it differently in handwriting doesn't convince me.
My guess is that like writing "g-d," it has to do with not frivolously writing the Hebrew alphabet which is considered to be holy in such a way that it is defamed, say by crumpling it up in paper to be thrown away etc. Basically a disposable substitute to avoid writing the holy script.
I can't confirm though; this is my wild guess.
Not a speaker of Hebrew, but I have a who does-their reasoning is 1. fluidly writing letters makes it fractionally quicker, which when you’re writing thousands of characters has a net decrease in time and effort spent, and 2. the fluid letters are easier to distinguish, if you have to duplicate a sheet of people’s written names, some will inevitably have poorer print, so the largely disparate fluid letters help that.
נ looks like ל on opposite side
כן
Bet is with dot. You wrote vet as a second letter. At least Yana teaches so.
some don’t use the dots and native speakers don’t need it but learners do
EZ שלום! זה עוזר לנו הזרים! חחחחחח😹😹😹😹
@user-rx9zl7iz4d same as with not using Nikkud, native speakers don't use it. You don't even have the option on the Google keyboard for it.
מי כאן ישראלי ?
Who is an Israeli here? Just trying to translate your question. It helps me learn.
This is about as confusing and makes almost as little sense as English cursive! Haha