Tuesday, July 6, 2010

22 Reasons Why I "Heart" Hebrew


The Beauty of Shalom

1. א The Semitic languages belong to a group whose name can be traced back to Noah’s oldest son Shem.

2. ב Hebrew, a Semitic language, was the language of the Jewish people in biblical times.

3. ג Most of the Old Testament was written in Hebrew.

4. ד Hebrew is read from right to left, not left to right as in English.

5. ה Our English letters sit on a horizontal baseline, whereas Hebrew characters hang down from an imaginary line above, like garments on a clothesline.

6. ו The Hebrew alphabet (aleph-bet) has twenty two characters beginning with aleph and bet.

7. ז All the Hebrew characters are consonants.

8. ח There are no vowels in the Hebrew language.

9. ט Hebrew has no characters representing numbers. Letters are used instead.

10. י Developed around the 8th century, small symbols called vowel points were used with the consonents in some writings.

11. כ Hebrew has a large number of three consonant or triconsonantal words.

12. ל Ancient Hebrew was spoken with the verb placed before the subject. Modern Hebrew places the subject first.

13. מ There are two genders—masculine and feminine—which are found in the inflection of the verbs and nouns.

14. נ Hebrew began to disappear as a spoken tongue among the Jews after they were defeated by the Babylonians in 586.

15. ס Well before the time of Jesus, Hebrew had been replaced by Aramaic as the Jewish spoken vernacular, although it was preserved as the language of the Jewish religion.

16. ע From 70 AD when the dispersion of the Jews from Palestine began, until modern times, Hebrew has remained the Jewish language of literature, religion, and learning.

17. פ The oldest extant example of Hebrew writing dates from the 11th or 10th century.

18. צ The Jews adapted the Aramaic writing and evolved from it a script called Square Hebrew, which is the source of modern Hebrew printing.

19. ק Most modern Hebrew handwritten text uses a cursive script which was developed more recently.

20. ר At the end of the 19th century, the Zionist movement brought about the revival of Hebrew as a spoken language, which culminated in its designation as an official tongue of the state of Israel in 1948.

21. ש The Hebrew word shalom means peace, and signifies welfare of every kind including security, contentment, sound health, prosperity, friendship, peace of mind and heart—as opposed to the dissatisfaction and unrest caused by evil.

22. ת Add your good reason to “heart” Hebrew here ____________________.

Related

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Information Source. Photos: bondidwhat & susan_d_p (Flickr)

Up Next—Marriage Monday Reminder

Do you love Hebrew too? Why?
(Can you tell me what the graphic at the top says?)



6 Comments:

Roo said...

i love hebrew too!! and love the new website!!! BEAUTY!!!

Janette@Janette's Sage said...

Love this...just peaks my interest and love even more
Thanks

Jennifer in OR said...

Love the new look over here! And I "heart" Hebrew, too. Someday, I'll learn more... :-)

Bobbi said...

Someday...I'm gonna learn some Hebrew. I just think it would be so neat to read the original language.

e-Mom said...

Roo: Thank you Roo! Shalom... ღ

Janette: Amen! One summer I took a crash course in Hebrew, but I've forgotten a lot. Sad.

Jennifer: I hope you can learn Hebrew (and Greek!) Thanks for visiting my new home on the web.

Bobbi: You would love Hebrew, Bobbi. You have the mind for it. ღ

e-Mom said...

FYI, I discovered that the Hebrew word in the graphic translates "cancellous" which is a human bone type. The image is a medical illustration.

"Cancellous bone - spongy bone that stores the red bone marrow; where blood cells are made."

Who knew?

 

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