Page 1
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-1 Chapter 1 – The Hebrew Alphabet (Alef-Bet)
Names of the Letters
Difficulties Recognizing Letters
– Final Forms
– Different Fonts
– Similar Letters
Writing and Transliterating the Letters
Begad Kephat Letters
Pronouncing the Letters
Page 2
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-2 The Alphabet is Just the Consonants
In English,
both consonants and vowels are letters of the alphabet.
– E.g., the vowel ‘A’ and the consonant ‘B’ are both
letters of the alphabet.
In Hebrew, only consonants are considered to be letters
– The consonant Alef א is a letter of the alphabet.
– The vowel Seghol is not a letter of the alphabet.
The OT was originally written without vowels
– Vowels and accents were added in AD 500-1000
– ךמל ךלמ
Page 3
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-3 Variations on Letter Names
Different people spell letter names differently
– E.g., Alef, Aleph, ’ālep, ףלא
Different people pronounce letter names differently
– E.g., Waw vs. Vav. Yod vs. Yud.
In Modern Hebrew, three letters are called different
names depending on whether or not they have a Dagesh
– Bet ב .Vet vs ב
– Kaf כ .Chaf vs כ
– Pay פ .Fay vs פ
All reasonable variations are acceptable in my class
Page 4
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-4
Alef
Page 5
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-5
Bet
Page 6
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-6
Gimel
Page 7
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-7
Dalet
Page 8
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-8
Hay
Page 9
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-9
Vav
Page 10
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-10
Zayin
Page 11
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-11
Ḥet
Page 12
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-12
Tet
Page 13
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-13
Yod
Page 14
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-14
Kaf
Page 15
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-15
Lamed
Page 16
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-16
Mem
Page 17
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-17
Nun
Page 18
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-18
Samech
Page 19
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-19
Ayin
Page 20
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-20
Pay
Page 21
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-21
Tsadee
Page 22
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-22
Qof
Page 23
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-23
Resh
Page 24
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-24
Sin
Page 25
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-25
Shin
Page 26
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-26
Tav
Page 27
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-27 Order of Sin ש and Shin ש
Acrostic poems (e.g., Psalm 119) show alphabet in order.
– Acrostics treat Sin ש and Shin ש as the same letter,
so they don’t tell us the order.
Modern Hebrew tends to put Shin ש before Sin ש
Our textbook and lexicon have Sin ש then Shin ש
– So memorize this order.
You’ll never lose points for either order.
Mnemonic: Keep the dots together when writing the
alphabet צקרששת... אבג
Page 28
בגדהוזחטיא פצקעכלמנס
רששת
Song copyright © Professor John Walton of Wheaton College
Used by permission
Page 29
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
Memorize the Alef-Bet Before Continuing
Before going on to the next section,
learn the name of each letter and their order.
Use the Alef-Bet song to practice the names in order.
– YouTube has 3 versions of the music video:
Letters and their names
Letters alone
All the letters showing at the same time
– The website also has the song in downloadable
formats: mp3, mp4, and wmv.
The website links to a place to practice the letters names.
1-29
Page 30
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-30 Chapter 1 – The Hebrew Alphabet (Alef-Bet)
Names of the Letters
Difficulties Recognizing Letters
– Final Forms
– Different Scripts
– Similar Letters
Writing and Transliterating the Letters
Begad Kephat Letters
Pronouncing the Letters
Page 31
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-31 Final Forms
Regular כ מ נ פ צ
Final ך ם ן ף ץ
5 letters use different letter shape at end of word
Mnemonic: “CoMMoN FaTS”
This shape is called the “final form” or “sofit form”
– Sofit (‘sew-feet’) means ‘last’
Final forms have the same pronunciation and
transliteration as the non-final forms.
Page 32
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-32 Multiple Hebrew Scripts
There are multiple letter styles for writing Hebrew
– Books are printed in a fancy style with serifs
שת אבגדהוזחטיכלמנסעפצקרש – But letters can be written without most of the serifs
א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כ ל מ נ ס ע פ צ ק ר ש ש ת
– Modern Hebrew is written in a cursive script
א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כ ל מ נ ס ע פ צ ק ר ש ש ת
Use the simplified shapes without serifs, and be legible.
Always write Right-to-Left
Page 33
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-33 Look-Alike Letters
(Kaf) כ (Bet) ב
(Nun) נ (Gimel) ג
(Tav) ת (Ḥet) ח (He) ה
(Shin) ש (Sin) ש
(Samek) ס (final Mem) ם
(Resh) ר (Dalet) ד
(Ayin) ע (Tsade) צ
(Final Kaf) ך (Final Nun) ן (Yod) י (Zayin) ז (Waw) ו
Page 34
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-34
Bet
Tail in Lower-Right
Kaf
Rounded Lower-Right
Page 35
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-35
Gimel
Bottom like heel of a boot
Nun
Flat bottom
Page 36
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-36
Hay
Gap in Top Left
Ḥet
No gap in Top Left
Page 37
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-37
Tav
Foot on Lower Left
Ḥet
No foot on Lower Left
Page 38
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-38
Sin
Dot on Upper Left
Shin
Dot on Upper Right
Page 39
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-39
Final Mem
Square Bottom
Samech
Round Bottom
Page 40
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-40
Dalet
Bump on Upper Right
Resh
Round Upper Right
Page 41
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-41
Tsade
Bump on Lower Right
Ayin
Round Lower Right
Page 42
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-42
Zayin
Tail on Upper Right
Vav
Round Upper Right
Page 43
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-43
Yod
Halfway Down
Vav
Full Height
Final Nun
Below the Line
Page 44
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-44
Final Kaf
Top Line is Big
Final Nun
Little or No Top Line
Usually a
Silent Shewa
in Final Kaf
Page 45
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
Memorize the Letters Before Continuing
Before going on to the next section,
learn to recognize the letters in different scripts,
including their final forms.
Make flash cards with the letters on one side and the
names on the other side.
– Include final forms.
– The website has a sheet of letters to print and cut out.
Some letters appear with and without a dot, for
use after you have learned about begad kephat.
– Write the name and recognition notes on the other
side of each card.
1-45
Page 46
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-46 Chapter 1 – The Hebrew Alphabet (Alef-Bet)
Names of the Letters
Difficulties Recognizing Letters
– Final Forms
– Different Fonts
– Similar Letters
Writing and Transliterating the Letters
Begad Kephat Letters
Pronouncing the Letters
Page 47
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-47 How to Write the Letters
The following slides suggest how to write the letters.
– You can write the letters differently,
as long as it is clear which letter is intended.
Most letters can take a dot inside them.
– These slides show the location of the dot.
– The dot is not part of the basic letter shape.
– Don’t add the dot when writing the alphabet.
– Draw the dot after drawing the letter itself.
Practice writing the letters as you watch the video.
– A practice sheet is available on the website.
Page 48
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-48 Alef א
1 2
3
Page 49
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-49 Bet ב
1
2 Tail on bottom right
distinguishes
Bet ב from Kaf כ
Page 50
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-50 Gimel ג
1
2
Page 51
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-51 Dalet ד
1
2 Tail on top right
distinguishes
Dalet ד from Resh ר
Page 52
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-52 Hay ה
1
2 Gap in upper left
distinguishes
Hay ה from Ḥet ח
Page 53
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-53 Waw / Vav ו
1
Unlike Yod י and Final Nun ן, Vav ו comes just down to the line
Optional hook
in top left
Page 54
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-54 Zayin ז
1
2
Tail on top right
distinguishes Zayin ז from Waw ו
Page 55
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-55 Ḥet ח
1
2
Lack of Gap in upper left
distinguishes
Ḥet ח from Hay ה
Page 56
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-56 Tet ט
1
Page 57
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-57 Yod י
1
Unlike Vav ו and Final Nun ן, Yod י doesn’t reach the bottom line.
Some people
curve Yod
Page 58
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-58 Kaf כ
1
Smooth bottom right
distinguishes
Kaf כ from Bet ב
Page 59
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-59 Final Kaf ך
1
2 Unlike Dalet ד
and Resh ר,
Final Kaf ך goes below the line
Alternately, Kaf can
be all 1 curved line
Page 60
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-60
Lamed ל
1
Page 61
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-61
Mem מ
1
2
Page 62
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-62
Final Mem ם
1
Square bottom distinguishes
Final Mem ם from Samek ס
Page 63
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-63 Nun נ
1
Some people
add a top hook
Page 64
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-64 Final Nun ן
1
Unlike Yod י and Vav ו, Final Nun ן extends below the line
Optional hook
in top left
Page 65
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-65 Samek ס
1
Optional hook
in top left
Round bottom distinguishes
Samek ס from Final Mem ם
Page 66
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-66 Ayin ע
1 2
Page 67
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-67 Pay פ
1
Page 68
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-68 Final Pay ף
1
Tail extends
below the line
Page 69
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-69 Tsade צ
1 2
Page 70
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-70 Final Tsade ץ
1 2
Tail extends
below the line
Optional bend
in line 1 at joint
Page 71
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-71 Qof ק
1
2
Tail extends
below the line
Page 72
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-72 Resh ר
1
Smooth top right corner
distinguishes
Resh ר from Dalet ד
Page 73
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-73 Sin ש
1
Placement of upper dot
distinguishes
Sin ש from Shin ש
2 3
Page 74
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-74 Shin ש
1
Placement of upper dot
distinguishes
Shin ש from Sin ש
2 3
Page 75
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-75 Tav ת
1
2
Tail in lower left
distinguishes
Tav ת from Ḥet ח
Page 76
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-76 Transliteration
Transliterate as follows
ʾ b g d h w z ḥ ṭ y k l m n s ʿ p ṣ q r ś š t Different books use different transliteration symbols
– Most of the variation is for vowels, not consonants
Learn to recognize transliterated words
– Transliteration is used in many reference books
Direction of writing depends on the script:
– Write Hebrew script Right-to-Left אבגד...
– Write transliteration Left-to-Right ʾ b g d ...
Page 77
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
Before Going on to the Next Section …
Learn to write the letters.
– The workbook has lines for practicing the letters.
– Don’t try to imitate the details of the fancy printed
letters in the book and workbook.
Learn to write the letters in order.
– Write the final forms right after the regular forms.
תק ר ש ש ץצ ףפ עס ןנ םל מ ךב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כ א
1-77
Page 78
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-78 Chapter 1 – The Hebrew Alphabet (Alef-Bet)
Names of the Letters
Difficulties Recognizing Letters
– Final Forms
– Different Fonts
– Similar Letters
Writing and Transliterating the Letters
Begad Kephat Letters
Pronouncing the Letters
Page 79
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
Begad Kephat Letters
“Begad Kephat” means the letters בגדכפת
A dot (‘Dagesh’) changes their sound.
– Dagesh a point-like, momentary sound (e.g., P)
– No Dagesh a sound that can last (e.g., F)
In Modern Hebrew, גדת pronounced like תגד
– I use this pronuncitation.
Modern Hebrew uses different names for בבככפפ
– Fay פ .Pay vs פ ,Chaf כ .Kaf vs כ ,Vet ב .Bet vs ב
1-79
ב ב ג ג ד ד כ כ פ פ ת ת
Sound THin T PH P baCH K THe D GH G V B
Page 80
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-80
Trans t t p p k k d d g g b b
Transliterating Begad Kephat Letters
Underline transliterated begadkephat without a Dagesh.
– Overline p and g, since an underline wouldn’t fit.
– The line indicates a sound that can go on and on.
E.g., ב = b = ‘v’ sound which can continue.
E.g., ב = b = ‘b’ sound which is momentary.
ב ב ג ג ד ד כ כ פ פ ת ת
Sound THin T PH P baCH K THe D GH G V B
Page 81
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
Before Going on to the Next Section …
Learn to recognize transliterated Hebrew letters.
– Many Bible dictionaries, commentaries, and journal
articles use transliteration rather than Hebrew
letters.
– Make flash cards with the transliteration on one side
and the letter on the other side.
– Have separate flash cards for Begad Kephat letters
with and without a dot (‘Dagesh’)
1-81
Page 82
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-82 Chapter 1 – The Hebrew Alphabet (Alef-Bet)
Names of the Letters
Difficulties Recognizing Letters
– Final Forms
– Different Fonts
– Similar Letters
Writing and Transliterating the Letters
Begad Kephat Letters
Pronouncing the Letters
Page 83
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-83 Guttural Letters
4 guttural letters
– (Alef) א
– (Hay) ה
– (Ḥet) ח– (Ayin) ע
Guttural letters affect the spelling of words
– The effects will be explained as they come up
Resh ר is not a guttural letter.
– It is never a guttural letter.
– But it has some of the characteristics of gutturals
– These will be explained as they come up
Page 84
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-84 Sound-Alike Letters
silent (Ayin) ע (Alef) א
Modern Vat (Vav) ו (Bet) ב
No Dagesh baCH (Chaf) כ (Ḥet) ח
with Dagesh Top (Tav) ת (Tet) ט
Kite (Qof) ק with Dagesh (Kaf) כ
Sat (Sin) ש (Samek) ס
Remember which letter is in a vocabulary word!
To help remember, I pronounce sound-alike letters
differently when pronouncing vocabulary words (but
not when reading texts), and I note the letter used.
Page 85
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-85 Variations in Letter Pronunciations
Some letters are pronounced differently in Modern
Hebrew.
– Pick a system and try to be consistent
– Recognize the other system when you hear it
Letter Traditional Modern
aGHast Good ג
THe Dog ד
THin Top ת
Wow Vat ו
Page 86
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-86
Page 87
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-87
Silent (nowdays)
– Pronounce the vowel that follows it.
Sounds like Ayin
– Both are silent
– When memorizing vocabulary, distinguish them.
– E.g., אם ‘if’ vs. עם ‘with’
Guttural
– It was originally a glottal stop (the pause in “uh-oh”).
Transliterate like single closing quote ʾ
Alef א is silent
Page 88
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-88
Page 89
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-89 Bet ב sounds like B or V
Begad kephat
– Dagesh ב B sound, transliterate b
– No dagesh ב V sound, transliterate b
Page 90
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-90
Page 91
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-91 Gimel ג sounds like G / GH
Begad kephat
– Dagesh ג G sound, transliterate g
– No dagesh ג GH sound, transliterate g
GH is troublesome to pronounce
– voiced velar fricative GH vs. voiced velar stop G
– Modern Hebrew pronounces both as G
Page 92
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-92
Page 93
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-93 Dalet ד sounds like D / TH in The
Begad kephat
– Dagesh ד D sound, transliterate d
– No dagesh ד TH sound of THe, transliterate d
Modern Hebrew always pronounces as D
Page 94
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-94
Page 95
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-95 Hay ה sounds like H
Transliterate as h
Guttural
Page 96
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-96
Page 97
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-97 VaV ו sounds like V (or W)
Modern Hebrew pronounces it as V
– So it sounds just like ב without Dagesh
– Called Vav in Modern Hebrew
Traditionally pronounced as W
– Transliterated w
– Waw
Page 98
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-98
Page 99
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-99 Zayin ז sounds like Z
Transliterate as z
Page 100
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-100
Page 101
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-101 Ḥet ח sounds like CH in Bach
Sounds just like Kaf without Dagesh כ – כ was deeper in the throat than ח
Transliterate as ḥ (h with dot under it)
Guttural
Page 102
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-102
Page 103
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-103 Tet ט sounds like T
Sounds just like Tav with Dagesh ת – When memorizing vocabulary, I give Tet intentional
emphasis to help me remember that the word has Tet
ת not Tav ט
Transliterate as ṭ (t with dot under it)
Page 104
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-104
Page 105
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-105 Yod י sounds like Y
Transliterate as y
Page 106
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-106
Page 107
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-107 Kaf כ sounds like K / CH in Bach
Begad kephat
– Dagesh כ K sound, transliterate k
– No dagesh כ CH sound of BaCH, transliterate k
Without a Dagesh, Kaf כ sounds like ח – כ was deeper in the throat than ח
Page 108
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-108
Page 109
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-109 Lamed ל sounds like L
Transliterate as l
Page 110
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-110
Page 111
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-111 Mem מ sounds like M
Transliterate as m
Page 112
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-112
Page 113
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-113 Nun נ sounds like N
Transliterate as n
Page 114
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-114
Page 115
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-115 Samek ס sounds like S
Sounds just like the letter Sin ש
Transliterate as s
Page 116
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-116
Page 117
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-117 Ayin ע is silent
Silent (nowdays)
– Pronounce the vowel that follows it.
Guttural
– It was originally a voiced pharyngeal fricative.
Silent just like Alef
– I try to pronounce it when memorizing vocabulary, to
help me remember that it is Ayin ע not Alef א in the
word. But when reading the Bible, I have it be silent,
just like Alef.
Transliterate like a single opening quote ʿ
Page 118
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-118
Page 119
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-119 Pe פ sounds like P / F
Begad kephat
– Dagesh פ P sound, transliterate p
– No dagesh פ F sound, transliterate p
Page 120
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-120
Page 121
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-121 Tsade צ sounds like TS
Transliterate as ṣ (s with a dot under it)
Page 122
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-122
Page 123
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-123 Qof ק sounds like K
Sounds just like the letter Kaf with a Dagesh כ
Transliterate as q
Page 124
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-124
Page 125
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-125 Resh ר sounds like R
Roll your R in the back of your throat if you can
Transliterate it as r
R is not a guttural letter
– But it has some of the characteristics of gutturals
Page 126
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-126
Page 127
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-127 Sin ש sounds like S
Sounds just like the letter Samek ס
Transliterate as ś (s with a rising accent)
Biblical acrostics treat Sin ש and Shin ש as one letter
Page 128
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-128
Page 129
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-129 Shin ש sounds like SH
Transliterate as š (s with a little v on top)
Biblical acrostics treat Sin ש and Shin ש as one letter
Page 130
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-130
Page 131
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
1-131 Tav ת sounds like T / TH
Begad kephat
– Dagesh ת T sound, transliterate t
– No dagesh ת TH sound of THin, transliterate t
ט sounds just like Tet ת
Modern Hebrew always pronounces as T
Page 132
HebrewSyntax.org ©JCBeckman 3/29/2012 Copy freely BY-NC-SA CC
Before Going on to the Next Chapter
Read chapter 1 in the textbook
– Read the textbook supplement along with each section of the
textbook as you go along.
Memorize the study guide.
Make sure you can also do the following:
– Write the Hebrew Alef-Bet, including final forms.
– Name and pronounce the Hebrew letters given their letter or
transliteration.
This includes final forms
This includes begad kephat with and without a Dagesh.
Practice taking the quiz for chapter 1 (PDF on website)
– The answer key is page 2 of the PDF.
1-132