Hebrew (I'vrit) is a Semitic language. Having become a language used only for Bible and Mishnah study, as well as ceremony and prayer over the past two and a half thousand years, Hebrew has experienced a rebirth as a spoken language during the 20th century, replacing Judaeo-Spanish, Yiddish and other languages of the Jewish diaspora as the spoken language of the majority of the Jewish people living in Israel.

Subjects


Writing conventions

The Hebrew language is normally written in the Hebrew alphabet. Due to publishing difficulties, and the unfamiliarity of many readers with that alphabet, there have been multiple ways of transcribing Hebrew into Roman letters. The only method which is strictly correct is the International Phonetic Alphabet. It is used (in a simplified ASCII form) in the section concerned with Phonology, to describe the sounds of the Hebrew language. However, the IPA is quite obscure and redundant when it comes to transcribing the words of a single language to a general audience. Therefore the system that this article will feature will try to restore the sound of Hebrew, and at least some orthographic pecularities. The system comes down to the following:



See Common phrases in different languages


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