all - כֹּל Biblical Hebrew word of the day
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- Опубліковано 27 кві 2023
- Today's word means "all, everyone, everything, each" depending on context. Note that the Ancient Near Eastern understanding of this word is usually not "all" meaning 100% of a group but more like the English saying, "*everyone* knows this" when in fact it means "almost everyone." ASL (American Sign Language) used specifically for "all."
כֹּל (Kohl) "all, everyone, everything, each" Memory verse: Deuteronomy 6.5
One word +one verse is really combination for bibilical teaching. May GOD of Israel bless your work!
אמן (amein!)
So powerful verse!all the more when heard in Hebrew.
Give Him your all 🙏💯.
Heard your teachings and smashed the subscribe button 😊
thank you!!
you're very welcome akhoti!
Great verse
I like the additional nuggets in there about heart, soul, and strength… great stuff in a short clip!
Thanks so much for letting me know akhi. These encouraging messages really help give me the emotional juice to push through and make more resources. May Hashem bless your learning!
Shalom shalom!! Thank you!
welcome akhi
Beautiful scriptures.shalom.
Thank you for commenting akhi. Shalom
Memorized the verse, thank you 💕
wonderful
אחלה לראות אנשים מלמדים עברית!!!
שלום
Are you fluent in ASL?
I ask because I starting to learn Biblical Hebrew end of May 2022 with @Aleph with Beth. By end of Sept 2022 I was listening to Psalms chapter 8 when I realized I knew a bunch of these words well. So on a Saturday I started my first Memory verse in Hebrew was Psalms 8:9. I have dappled 40+ yrs in both ASL and Hebrew. So I was trying to memorize in both Hebrew and ASL. We are rural, but have a small deaf community that attend our congregation. Sunday I talked with two of our interpreters for ASL, trying to get them to translate this verse for me, they had differing opinions.
I would love it if you would share this verse in Hebrew and ASL, as it is very special verse for me. By the Tuesday after I started memorizing it, I ended up in the Hospital for a week, and a majority of that time I was basically out of it or without my Hebrew Bible. But I clung to this verse! Both consciously and subconsciously. I know it was God who directed me to Memorize it just days before, knowing I would need it and HIM to hold onto.
No I am not fluent in ASL. I know some words but mostly for very very basic communication only. I'm taking this opportunity to grow my knowledge while making the videos for the Hebrew words as well. I thought it could help people remember the words better, while also including deaf people in the joy of learning Hebrew and expand those hearing people who can communicate at least a bit.
Proverbs 23:26
Jeremiah 4:4
Just seeing some of this references now not sure why i didn't see the ,messages vefore
So the 'O' sound of khol changes to a strrong 'ah' sound when a 'with' prefix (bait) is added?
It's an 'O' sound either way, just in the case when there is a maqqef (hyphen) after it, then we write the 'O' sound with a "short qamets", that's the T looking letter but in this case it designates 'O' instead of "A" Some nice publishers will make the vertical bar longer when the qamets is an 'O'
Why don’t we ever translate alef tav? What does it mean? I know alef tav means “you” (f.) in modern Hebrew but what is the purpose of it in Biblical Hebrew?
The word for "you" is a different word than what you are asking about though they are written with the same consonants. the Aleph-Tav you are asking about is also present in Modern Hebrew dialect and in Mishnaic Hebrew. It is not translated b/c it's just a grammatical pointer to the Definite Direct Object. This means when the verb acts on something which is definite (i.e. THE ball not just *A* ball) then the language requires aleph tav (pronounced "et") to mark it. Jewish Aramaic does this as well but uses the word ית (yat). So we don't translate it into English b/c we don't have such a word in English nor a need for it/
Question. When do the vav have a u sound or the w sound?
So in ancient Hebrew the 'w' sound was the normal consonantal sound for vav. Though today we read it as a 'v' going with Israeli (Sephardic) pronounciation. When you see a dot in the middle of the vav this is a U sound.
@@HebrewLiteracy thank you.