It depends on if you are a male or a female, and also if you are talking to a male or a female:
male to male: atah nidmeh kemishehu she'ani yode'a (×תה × ×“×ž×” כמישהו ש×× ×™ יודע)
male to female: at nidmah kemishehi she'ani yode'a (×ת × ×“×ž×” כמישהי ש×× ×™ יודע)
female to male: atah nidmeh kemishehu she'ani Yoda'at (×תה × ×“×ž×” כמישהו ש×× ×™ יודעת)
female to female: at nidmah kemishehi she'ani yoda'at (×ת × ×“×ž×” כמישהי ש×× ×™ יודעת)
Chaiyim (that doesn't quite sound like that, if your interested ask someone who know Hebrew to pronounce it for you that the closest English equilivant)
if it is close to Hebrew it would be "yakove" but i thin that in Arabic the V sound becomes a W sound so it would be more like "yakow" but i don't know Arabic and my Hebrew is kinda poor so don't take my word for it
The ISBN of A Sound Like Someone Trying Not to Make a Sound is 0385746806.
khokhma (חוכמה)
When your heart speeds up at the thought of them or you can never stop thinking of them. When you get butterflies in your stomach when you see them. It may sound cheesy but thats how you know you really like someone.
well they sound like there laughung while talking and then they will get along will them
A Sound Like Someone Trying Not to Make a Sound was created on 2004-09-28.
Hebrew is a phonetically simple language. Click Here to see a you-tube clip in Hebrew, where Israelis try Russian food for the first time.
There is no "letter k" in the Hebrew alphabet. But there are 2 Hebrew letters that have the same sound as the English letter k: they are כ and ק.
In Hebrew Moses' name is Moshe (משה), pronounced Mo-sheh
Weronika = ×•×¨×•× ×™×§×” (There's no W in Hebrew, so it would just sound like Veronika).
Hannah, which in Hebrew is pronounced Khana (×—× ×”). The kh is a gutteral sound, like the ch in German.