Jewish tradition and scripture hold that it was Abraham, in about 2000 BCE
The Hebrews were the first to adapt the Phoenician alphabet for the Hebrew language.
The first person to be called a Hebrew in the Bible was Abraham. He is considered the patriarch of the Hebrew people and is mentioned in the book of Genesis.
The Hebrew people were the first people to use the old testament.
Yes, Abraham was the first Hebrew.
Tradition holds that it was Abraham.
The builders and first inhabitants of Jerusalem spoke Hebrew. Hebrew fell out of use sometime after the 6th Century BCE, and was replaced by Aramaic, which is closely related to Hebrew.
It's doesn't make any difference, but most people learn Modern Hebrew first. They're very close.
The first five books of the Bible are called the Torah (teaching in Hebrew). Their original Hebrew names are, in this order:BereishitShmotVayikraBamidbarDevarim
No one knows. The Hebrew people have an unknown origin that goes back possibly 12,000 years or more. But if you are asking about the first Hebrew to believe in God, tradition holds it was Abraham, who lived in the land of Israel around 2000 BCE.
This is the First Commandment given to the Hebrew people on Mount Sinai.
Hebrew has been spoken for many thousands of years prior to the invention of Hebrew writing, so no one knows what the first Hebrew word was. The first Hebrew word in the Bible is "bereshít" (בראשית)
first is Rishon in Hebrew. In Hebrew you spell it Reish, Alef, Shin, Vav, Nun - ראשון