to a woman: אַתָ מַסְרִחָה כְּקוֹף
at masricha kekof
to a man:
אַתָּה מַסְרִחַ כְּקוֹף
atah masriach kekof
There is no A in Hebrew. Hebrew uses a completely different kind of alphabet, which has no vowels in it.
Hebrew is a language that works like any other language. It has consonants and vowels, words and sentences.
I think what you mean is, "how do you read Modern Hebrew without vowels". (You can't pronounce any words without vowels).Hebrew is a consonant-based language, just like all Semitic languages. The words are fairly easy to read without vowels, because there are only a limited number of patterns that form words. When a Hebrew reader sees a word in context, they mentally supply the vowels without even realizing it.It can be done in English too, though not as easily, since English is not a consonant-based language.For example:Rchrd cn rd Hbrw wtht vwls.
There is no "letter b" in the Hebrew alphabet, but there is a letter that sounds like 'b' and it is called Bet (בּ).
hueles a mono
because you smell like a monkey with a milkshake
because you smell like a monkey with a milkeshake
Yes, however the Yiddish alphabet is modified for vowels. The Hebrew alphabet has no vowels, and uses dots and dashes to represent vowels.Yiddish vowels not found in Hebrew:ah = אַaw = אָeh = עih or ee = יoy = ויoo = וHebrew vowels look like this (only the dots and dashes are vowels): אָ אַ אֲ אֵ אֶ אֱ אִ אִי אֹ אֻ אוּ אְ
It is called a Bar Mitzvah and no, the Torah contains no vowels.
it smells like snow because it lives in snow
There is no O in the Hebrew language. Hebrew uses an entirely different writing system. The alphabet has no vowels in it. Vowels can sometimes be represented with accent marks.The 4 marks that mean the long "o" sound are:ָֹוֳֹThe letter samech (ס) is shaped like a circle, so it looks like an O, but it is pronounced like an S.
No, Hebrew has many diacritical marks, but nothing that like an umlaut, except maybe the vowel tsere, which is pronounced eh and appears underneath the letter like this: אֵAdditionally, Hebrew does not have front-rounded vowels (i.e. the sounds of ö or ü).