You would say "hah-m'dah-BEHR ah-TEM eev-REET ?"
We're curious ... If you don't know how to say that, then why would you ever need to ??
to a male: atah medaber ivrit (×תה מדבר עברית)
to a female: aht medaberet ivrit (×ת מדברת עברית)
to a male: atah medaber Ivrit (אתה מדבר עברית)to a female: at medaberet Ivrit (את מדברת עברית)
hebrew, we speak hebrew! as for your question: "ashir" with the emphasis on the a
If you're asking how to say "You speak a little Hebrew" in Hebrew, it's to a male: atah medaber ktsat ivrit to a female: at medaberet ktsat ivrit
go google translate and translate to Hebrew then click the speak button!!!!!!!!
Anee low mida-bear ivrit kol kakh tov I don't speak Hebrew so well the English words in the transliteration are to be read as they are in English. They will get the point by your accent
No, she does not speak Hebrew, though she knows many Hebrew words.
Some Muslims, particularly Israeli Muslims and some Palestinians speak Hebrew.
If you mean Daniella Monet, then the answer is no.
efshar ledabehr eem amir (ΓΒΓΒ€ΓΒ©ΓΒ¨ ΓΕΓβΓβΓΒ¨ ΓΒΓΒ ΓΒΓΕΎΓβ’ΓΒ¨)
"Shalom" in Hebrew. (Jewish is not a language unless you are referring to Yiddish, which is another category on this site.)
There is no language of Buddhism. Individual Buddhists speak whatever language they and their countrymen speak. Many original Buddhist texts are written in Pali in the parallel way that many original Christian texts are in Hebrew, Aramaic or Greek and the vast body of Christians do not speak these languages
There is no such word as "speaked". You either mean "spoke" or "spoken". The Hebrew verb "to speak" is diber (דיבר). In order to conjugate the past tense, you have to provide the entire sentence.
There are no such languages as "Israeli" and "Palestinian". Israelis speak Hebrew, Arabic, Russian, and English. Palestinians primarily speak Arabic. Hebrew: Shalom (שלום) Arabic: Salaam (سلام) Russian: Mir (Мир) English: Peace