Yes. Houston has a rather large Jewish population. To find a Hebrew speaker, contact the JFSA in Houston, or any synagogue for someone who may be able to direct you.
Yes. Houston has a rather large Jewish population. To find a Hebrew speaker, please see related links for the JFSA in Houston, who may be able to direct you.
No. "Hebrew" is a language, not a person. The people living in Jerusalem today Speak Hebrew and Arabic.
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.
No, the Nazis did not speak Hebrew. In fact, virtually NO European Jews spoke Hebrew either at the time of the Holocaust*. Almost no one spoke Hebrew outside of Israel. (At the time, most East European Jews spoke Yiddish, which is fairly close to German).*It's important to note, that The Jews of Europe used Hebrew in synagogues for prayer, study, and other scholarly uses, but this is not the same thing as speaking Hebrew.
You can be a Dutch and a Jew both. A Hebrew Jew is part of a RACE of humans. A Dutch is a person born in the Netherlands or has been naturalized a Dutch. Dutch is also the name of their language. Most of them are from the white race but there are some Hebrew race Dutch people in the Netherlands. The Hebrew Jews can speak in Hebrew and Yiddish. They can speak in the language of the nation they live or were born in. So a Hebrew Dutch could speak Dutch too.
Israel. (People in Turkey do not speak Hebrew. The Jewish population of Turkey is less than 1%).
Agam Rodberg can fluently speak Hebrew and English.
UCLA and USC offer courses in both Modern and Biblical Hebrew. You can also find Hebrew courses of varying levels at certain Los Angeles Community Colleges.
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
Hebrew.
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