The Hebrew double-vav: rule of thumb / listen to an Israeli voice artist
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- Опубликовано: 29 июн 2024
- Currently, the reading and writing course is for free. Maybe you want to catch it before I change my mind. Choose your language www.hebrew-verbs.com/courses
HOW TO MASTER HEBREW VERBS
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Danke Rut! Das ist so hilfreich!
Super helpful. I learned my Hebrew as a foreign chef in the Hilton Tel-Aviv in the 1990's.
It's still familiar to me now many years later in my native Northern Ireland when I hear or see it. Shalom. Great course. I will recommend it to Hebrew interested friends. 🤍
Wow!
Thank you!!
I wish you could have been my school teacher from grade 1 through 11 , I may have learned something. Here in the US school system has failed. I've learned a lot from you. But I realize I'll never be that fluent. Wish I could have said all this in evret. It would have been very rough. Lol blessings to you Rut ❤🙏🙌
one needs to get obsessed a bit, but do not let go of it. Your Hebrew is my skateboard 😃😃
You are amazing❤
I signed up for your course on parsing verbs last week. Took advantage of your birthday special…. Happy Birthday, Rut! Best thing I ever did! You are an excellent teacher. Very methodical/logical. I don’t like this new way of teaching of just repetition without any understanding. If you have other courses, I would like to sign up 🙏🏼❤
Thank you so much! ❤
Brilliant! Thank you so much.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you. Chodesh Tov to you and your family. 👍💯
Toda raba!
I really love your videos ❤
Thank you so much
I hope you do a verb conjugation video including the present and past thank you again!
There are many videos on this channel with conjugations. Take a look at the playlists as well as my website www.hebrew-verbs.com
Your videos are so helpful! But in cases of foreign words, such as טאיוואן (Taiwan), the double vav is pronounced as /w/, isn't it? Or it's still pronounced /v/?
Here: v .In English you pronounce it W, but in many other languages it is v (Czech, German, Luxembourgish...)
Yes, there is /w/ in this word. Some people say that there is no /w/ in Hebrew, but it's not accurate. The sound of the letter Vav in Hebrew is used to be /w/, that was the sound of this letter before the middle ages, when it shifted into /v/. That still has an impact on the pronunciation in Hebrew, but in loanwords, the sound /w/ usually remains /w/ if they were borrowed recently.
MERCI
Thanks
toda. its that simple,never knew that
👍👍👍👍
Thank you , can you share the historical reasons for the niqud ?
To be honest, I am not a nikkud expert. For modern Hebrew they do more bad than good 😄
the dot in the vav is not for historical reasons. It's a dagesh, and doubles the letter, like the shaddah in Arabic. Some sephardic people, like the Yemenite, know how to pronounce the double letter, and they actually pronounce it. It's not historical.
@@kalman3863 I think she is just trying to explain modern Hebrew here. But I love learning new facts like this.❤️
תודה🩵
Thank you for the video!
You said that we could right now access your verb course for free. I clicked on the link you provided, and see that there is a seven day trial for your course. Is this what you mean? I couldn’t get any further in the registration process without giving my credit card information.
Not the verb course. The reading and writing course is free.
all right, thank you.
How do I get the free course you spoke about.
www.hebrew-verbs.com
O.k. That's how you pronounce conversational Hebrew in Israel, but in the ancient Hebrew, was the double vav not pronounced like a W?
If you find somebody who "knows" how it was pronounced 3000 years ago, let me know 😂😂
@@HebrewVerbs The Yemenites!