First, a caution: Hebrew is a language of exceptions to every rule.
Masculine nouns: add the ending " - EEM" to the noun.
Feminine nouns: add the ending " - OTE" to the noun.
Of course, you have to know which nouns are masculine and which are feminine. That's another
whole subject.
You single male person: "ah-TAH"
You single female person: "AHT"
You several male people: "ah-TEM"
You several female people: "ah-TEN"
These only apply as the subject of the sentence, as in "You are cool. You came home.", etc.
For the objects of verbs, such as "I like you. Who are you ? I'll call you.", that's another whole matter,
which I'm not qualified to deal with. It's probably more than you were looking for anyway.
There is no Hebrew word for "are". It just depends on the sentence.
The Hebrew word for "you" depends. Here are some options:
masculine singular, subject pronoun = atah (×תה)
feminine singular, subject pronoun = aht (×ת)
masculine plural, subject pronoun = atem (×ת×)
feminine plural, subject pronoun = aten (×תן)
To make the object form (to you, for you, etc), it is a suffix that is attached to the preposition. For example:
to you (masculine singular) = lecha (לך)
to you (feminine singular) = lach (לך)
It depends on what preposition precedes the word "you" or if it's a subject pronoun.
If someone says "chag sameach" (happy holiday) to you, the answer would be:
masculine plural: gam lachem (×’× ×œ×›×)
feminine plural: gam lachen (×’× ×œ×›×Ÿ)
If someone says "you're a jerk", the answer would be:
masculine plural: atem gam ken (××ª× ×’× ×›×Ÿ)
feminine plural: aten gam ken (×תן ×’× ×›×Ÿ)
yeladot (ילדות)
The Hebrew words for lost (noun) are as follows: Avood (male), Avooda (female), Avoodim (plural), Avoodot (plural female).
some Hebrew nouns are considered plural in Hebrew, even though they are singular in English. Mayim (מים), the Hebrew word for water, is actually a plural word. it uses plural grammar forms as well, such as cold water: mayim karim. This is common with abstract or collective nouns. Other words that are plural in Hebrew but singular in English are: Chayim (חיים), life panim (×¤× ×™×), face rachamim (רחמים), mercy
No. 'Kibbutzim' is the plural of kibbutz... in Hebrew.
Give praise (plural, second person imperative). It is also the Hebrew word for "India".
A boyscout in Hebrew is a "Tzofe", written: "צופה" and "צופים" in plural.
The word "water" is masculine plural in Hebrew, so the pronoun would be הם ("they").
There is no hebrew word for "are". That would be implied by the rest of the sentence. You (masculine) = atah (אתה) you (feminine = aht (את) you (plural) = atem (אתם) you (feminine plural) = aten (אתן)
The accepted plural form in English is rabbis. However, it is customary among English speaking Jews to use the Hebrew plural form for English words derived from Hebrew. Therefore the Anglo-Hebraic plural for "rabbi" would be "rabbanim".
Yeshivot or Yeshivos, depending on which dialect of Hebrew you are using.
Jewelry in Hebrew is Tah-shi-tim (תכשיטים).
The Hebrew plural of Torah (תורה) is torot (תורות). In English, it is more common to say "Torahs".
Yeladim = children (male plural or mixed plural) Yaldah = girl Yeladot = girls Yeled = boy