Yakira = יקירה
Yakira = יקירה
Ancient Hebrew writings had no vowels. Vowels were not invented for Hebrew until the 10th century.
Yakira Peguero was born in 1976.
There is no such thing as a "normal" Hebrew word. But most Hebrew words have between 1 and 10 vowels.
There is no letter A in the Hebrew alphabet. In fact, the Hebrew alphabet doesn't have any vowels in it at all.To form vowels in Hebrew, marks are added to the letters. For example:A as in make = אֵיA as in Father = אָ אַ or אֲA as in cat = doesn't exist in Hebrew
There is no A in Hebrew. Hebrew uses a completely different kind of alphabet, which has no vowels in it.
There was no problem with the Hebrew writing system, only a challenge: Hebrew was written without vowels. around the 7th to10th Centuries, a system of vowels was added to aid in reading.
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.
Vowels are important in some languages e.g. Scandinavian languages have three more vowels than English. Other languages like Hebrew have no vowels.
You must mean, "What language has no vowels"...? If that was your question, then I would answer, "Hebrew", the language of Israel.
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.
Hebrew had no way to write vowels until the 10th Century.