Summer Hebrew 1
Learn to read Hebrew with Joshua Maria Garcia. Joshua has decades of experience teaching Hebrew reading and, if you follow the instructions, you can learn to read in no time.
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Пікірлер: 31
I started following you today and I am SO ENJOYING your teaching...the in-depth detailed explanations in such a FUN way...I am ENJOYING the class...I am learning and laughing at times (with you)...THANK YOU
You are an amazing teacher!!! Thank you for sharing!!❤️❤️
Thank you. Good teaching method👍
Luv'd it, very informative... Thank you💯
תודה אח. שלום ^w^ very helpful stuff man. thank you so much! excited to improve my hebrew
Wow! Thank you so much! Can’t wait to hear more. This was really helpful.
Thanks, God bless you
Thank you!
Toda. Easy to follow
Thank you .❤
Well done!
Thanks for recognizing the fact that it's not always summer in June. 😊 İn fact İ come from an equatorial country where you have neither summer nor winter. 😃
@joshuamariagarcia8780
4 күн бұрын
I live in New England, but our seasons don't exist anymore because of climate change so now we are basically subtropical. -_-
Wow, ana with the stress on last a pronounced anaa, means exactly the same thing in my language which is an African Cushitic language!! What a coincidence!!
@joshuamariagarcia8780
3 күн бұрын
@@mingosutu probably not! That’s not so far away. There are so many relationships between Hebrew and other Semitic Languages, some Northeast African languages, even PIE.
@mingosutu
3 күн бұрын
@@joshuamariagarcia8780 You are probably right but my language is Cushitic not Semitic unless it is a borrowed word.
Toda...
I don't get the ah's . What is the difference between the two?
@joshuamariagarcia8780
9 күн бұрын
@@lesliec9311 there isn’t a difference in standard pronunciation but there was in classical Hebrew. There are grammatical differences but that comes later. :)
@katialbert
9 күн бұрын
If you talk to a Yemenite Jew, they can most likely pronounce certain letters the old, gutteral way. But nobody really uses those sounds anymore. You can try to Google ancient Hebrew pronunciation. I think there's at least one video of it.
@joshuamariagarcia8780
9 күн бұрын
@@katialbert yes absolutely! Yemenite is still very similar to reconstructed Classical, probably in part due to Arabic influence. I am planning a short video on Classical pronunciation. Coming soon!
❤ Shabat SHALOM! ❤ I'm learning Hebrew and I see everybody has a different Hebrew 😂😭🤔 By the way: is it BEiN or BEN (son) ? As far as I know it is "BEN" ! Otherwise those two horizontal dots are for ONE vowel sounding: "E" or TWO vowels sounding "Ei" ??? 😳 I have never heard of "Ei", but I learn from another two students... (Or this must come with the English phonetical system, isn't it? That letter E is pronounced "ei", in English.) I'm neither an English native speaker; thanks! TODA RABA!
@joshuamariagarcia8780
7 күн бұрын
@@missirina6912 in Biblical Hebrew it should be ‘bein.’ In modern Hebrew it is ‘ben.’
Is this Biblical Hebrew or Modern Hebrew please?
@joshuamariagarcia8780
8 күн бұрын
@@bwreed6610 This is Biblical with standard pronunciation used in the Jewish world and the Academy today.
@danielwatkins877
8 күн бұрын
He says he's using modern pronunciation in the beginning of the video. The good news for you is that other than pronunciation, they're not super different.
@bwreed6610
8 күн бұрын
@@joshuamariagarcia8780 Thank you.
@bwreed6610
8 күн бұрын
@@danielwatkins877 Thank you.
@joshuamariagarcia8780
8 күн бұрын
@@danielwatkins877but not Modern Hebrew as in Israeli Hebrew. There are some significant differences between Classical and Modern grammar. Like Classical doesn’t have true tenses and Modern has a ton of influence from Aramaic, Arabic, and English. Classical tends to also be more “terse” and use far less words to say the same things.