How to Pronounce Hebrew Like a Native Speaker

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 136

  • @HebrewPod101
    @HebrewPod101  2 роки тому +2

    bit.ly/3rcpY6r Click here and get the best resources online to master Hebrew grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!

  • @yoav19991
    @yoav19991 2 роки тому +30

    Hey, native hebrew speaker here to make you life even easier: 1. we don't roll the r anymore 2. we don't use the pointing system (most don't even remember how it works)

  • @EsmeBarnettLaceandsugarfrills
    @EsmeBarnettLaceandsugarfrills 4 роки тому +17

    I must say im am so impressed with your class. Because I have understood it clearly. Thank you

  • @mohammedatter686
    @mohammedatter686 4 роки тому +4

    תודה

  • @megiramos9695
    @megiramos9695 4 роки тому +5

    I cannot remember what I was watching or listening to in Hebrew when this came through my auto-play. But, this is the video that broke my fear that I "couldn't learn Hebrew; because I couldn't create a 'truckload of phlem' up into my throat." As this video shows the anatomical ways different sounds are made, this made it easier for me to understand how to make het. I really love making the sound to be honest with you! I am so glad that this video came through my auto-play; because now I have been using HebrewPod101 for 3 full weeks, I have learned SO much. Yesterday, I even sent two text messages in correct Hebrew letters, and correct sentence structures without looking at a chart! Niqud has been the most difficult for me to understand. Sometimes, no niqud is easiest for me, because I can then sound out all the different sounds I know the letters could be making, and sound out all the different words it could possibly be. My teacher was excellent when I read his introduction and was pretty confident I had the word sounded out correctly, but I was unaware of the meaning so I couldn't translate it. He explained what the word meant! Reading was difficult at first because it looks so different than what we would write either in cursive hand writing, or in print writing. But now, reading is getting much easier, and I am so excited! I am speaking, reading, and translating SO VERY MUCH more Hebrew in less than 30 days, than I ever have been able to with a year's worth of Spanish in High School. If I ask you "where is the bathroom" in Spanish, I'll never make it there if you gave me directions. (It doesn't matter that I can correctly ask, if I cannot comprehend your response, right?!) But, I am confident that I could ask someone in Hebrew, "where is the bathroom", and then reach the bathroom based on their responses. I am also confident that I could ask someone how much something costs, and be able to pay them appropriately according to their response, as well. I am truly grateful that this came up. Todah, and Baruch!

    • @Truths1vip
      @Truths1vip 4 роки тому

      Megi Scott who cares. Ms super loser

    • @yungfruitsnack7376
      @yungfruitsnack7376 3 роки тому +1

      thats so cool! so when i sign up to hebrewpod i get a teacher? do u video chat with them? how do they know u r pronouncing things correctly?

    • @megiramos9695
      @megiramos9695 3 роки тому +3

      @@yungfruitsnack7376 No, you do not automatically get a teacher. I paid for the Premium Plus to get a teacher. You do not video chat. However you will get assigments with a teacher, and you can send voice clips and video of you speaking so they can help you. They typically get back within 48 hours of your messages. You CANNOT video chat with them, however like I said before, you can send a video of you speaking and they can help you. There are tests that come up where you have to listen to what is said by the program, and either tell what was said, or answer questions about it.

    • @megiramos9695
      @megiramos9695 3 роки тому +1

      @@Truths1vip ?????? Excuse you.

    • @yungfruitsnack7376
      @yungfruitsnack7376 3 роки тому +1

      @@megiramos9695 nice thanks

  • @orhoushmand85
    @orhoushmand85 3 роки тому +3

    14:29 More like "Tht whych 's hytfwl tw yw, dw nt dw tw ywr fllw."

  • @fawzyelsayedfouadosman1584
    @fawzyelsayedfouadosman1584 4 роки тому +4

    شكرا لكم علي كل هذه الفيديوهات والتي منها سوف اتعلم المذيد والمذيد من اللغه العبريه

    • @sashagamino2268
      @sashagamino2268 3 роки тому

      That’s great that you want to learn. What’s your reason for wanting to learn?

    • @thesilentway1086
      @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому

      @Fawzy Elsayed Fouad Osman - Hebrew would be easier to learn and pronounce for an Arabic speaker since both languages come from same source, I think same it is also very important to learn Arabic, it is just harder than Hebrew

  • @DavidChapa-nq9jm
    @DavidChapa-nq9jm 21 день тому

    תודה רבה על

  • @pauloamaral6069
    @pauloamaral6069 3 роки тому +9

    Wow, and Brazilian Portuguese is all about vowels and open sounds! Hebrew is quite the inverse. Lucky to us that we manage well R and T sounds. In fact, english pronounce is the one that we tend to miss more. 🇧🇷🇵🇹

    • @sashagamino2268
      @sashagamino2268 3 роки тому +1

      But that Brazilian accent is amazing. There's nothing like it other than French and Hebrew accents which are very sexy too.

    • @thesilentway1086
      @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому

      @Paulo Amaral - I have been to Brazil and to Spanish speaking countries , for a Brazilian Portuguese speaker to pronounce Hebrew is harder than a Spanish speaker since most words in Hebrew are spoken with full mouth and not swollen .

  • @colincools684
    @colincools684 4 роки тому +7

    OMG YES YARA SLAY QUEEN

  • @gheorghemare7421
    @gheorghemare7421 3 роки тому +1

    Grazie Yaara per il tuo unico hacca del deserto, amo le sfumature che dai alla consonante “h”... grazie.

  • @strnbrg59
    @strnbrg59 4 роки тому +6

    Follow these principles and you'll be better understood, but no way any native will mistake you for a native. That 'r' for instance: it sure ain't the standard (Ohio, Michigan...) 'r'. But it's not the Spanish trilled 'r' either; there's only one "trill" to the Israeli 'r'. Nor is it the French 'r', which sounds halfway to 'g' (though there's some variation in Israel, with some people using that French-like 'rhgh', but others do trill it, especially older perfectionist types).

  • @sliceronsteam
    @sliceronsteam Рік тому

    So a Katana is a smaller sword (of Japanese origin?) for much better speed and accuracy. And k'tana in Hebrew means small. Mind Blown.

  • @soonerduck9622
    @soonerduck9622 4 роки тому +10

    What the heck is that sound symbol between the S and T. It looks like an integral from calculus one.

    • @Abilliph
      @Abilliph 4 роки тому +5

      a bit late, but this is the sh sound in English.

    • @soonerduck9622
      @soonerduck9622 4 роки тому

      @@Abilliph thanks

  • @claudineijesus8880
    @claudineijesus8880 2 роки тому

    Hebrew is very interesting ... Shallon

  • @RuthLawrance
    @RuthLawrance 10 місяців тому

    Very helpful and enjoyabke❤

  • @renegarza7079
    @renegarza7079 5 років тому +6

    Gracias por compartir ☺️

  • @luyombojonathan7715
    @luyombojonathan7715 3 роки тому

    Thanks alot

  • @stanleyjabellana1867
    @stanleyjabellana1867 3 місяці тому

    Kol hakavod! Achoti

  • @hossamO07
    @hossamO07 3 роки тому

    I mastered them , no new pronunciation letters

  • @florimarsanchez9729
    @florimarsanchez9729 Рік тому

    excellent!!!!!!

  • @OrlyYahalom
    @OrlyYahalom 4 роки тому +13

    Too bad the teacher repeatedly misspronunced the name of the Hebrew speaker! It's Ya-a-ra. Three syllables, with the stress on the last one.

  • @fawzyelsayedfouadosman1584
    @fawzyelsayedfouadosman1584 4 роки тому +1

    תודא לכם ן בוקר טוב

    • @davidmoshe2608
      @davidmoshe2608 3 роки тому

      אני מנחש שאתה לא דובר עברית

  • @Blissful_Chami
    @Blissful_Chami 3 роки тому +1

    What is the word to say ‘fruitful’ in Hebrew?

    • @thesilentway1086
      @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому

      @Chami Fernandpoule - the word is פורה "poreh" - with accent on the last eh. where are u from ?

  • @GuillermoSilvaSilva
    @GuillermoSilvaSilva 5 років тому +10

    Cuando yo estudié el hebreo, la *r* se pronunciaba como en espanol. El sonido que presentaba un poco de dificultad era la *t* final, que los hispanófonos tendemos a pronunciar *d*.

    • @thesilentway1086
      @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому +1

      @Guillermo Silva Silva - La forma de pronunciar R como espanol es la original como el Hebreo Biblico, En las instituciones oficiales de Israel (Radio Tele y gran parte de la educacion) se pronunciava como espanol , pero la mayoria de los Israelies hablaron R como frances, y desde 1985 la tele y radio se cambion en R frances, la exacta causa ?
      no se realmente.
      el T final es paractica y costumbre. En la idioma Turka por ejemplo un D en el fin es siempe T por ejemplo el nombre "Ahmed" es pronunciado "Ahmet"

    • @GuillermoSilvaSilva
      @GuillermoSilvaSilva 3 роки тому +1

      @@thesilentway1086 *Thank you very much!*

  • @Jewel_Boyd
    @Jewel_Boyd 4 роки тому +2

    Is this the correct spelling of queen in Hebrew?
    מלכה

  • @janismoller1752
    @janismoller1752 2 роки тому

    Perfect teaching

  • @martinkoubek3434
    @martinkoubek3434 Рік тому

    What does her name mean in Hebrew please ?
    In Czech and possibly some other slavic languages is same sounding name , which means "Springcelebrator"
    Male :
    Jaroslav (full name, formal)
    [-a ² ⁴|-ovi -u ³ ⁶|-e! ⁵|-em ⁷]
    Jarda (colloquial, familiar )
    Jára (friendly familiar)
    [-y ²|-ovi ³ ⁶|-u ⁴|-o! ⁵|-ou⁷]
    Jaroušek (cuddly of small boy)
    [-a ² ⁴|-ovi³ ⁶|-u! ⁵|-em ⁷] w-out e
    Female:
    Jaroslava (full name, normal)
    [-y ²|-ě ³ ⁶|-u ⁴|-o! ⁵|-ou ⁷]
    Jarka (informal)
    [-y ²|ce ³ ⁶|-u ⁴|-o! ⁵|-ou ⁷]
    Jaruška (from female friendly colloquial or cuddly ,from male impudence up to a level of chucpe :-)
    [-y ²|ce ³ ⁶|-u ⁴ |-o! --! ⁵|-ou ⁷]
    (Sorry I just couldn't write the J as Ypsilon it looks totaly weird:-)

    • @Abilliph
      @Abilliph Рік тому

      Her name, Ya'ará, can mean 2 things in Hebrew:
      1. It's either a type of plant that grows on fences. It's called a honeysuckle. It has small white flowers and smells very sweet.. like honey.
      2. In the bible it usually means a honeycomb, the parts in the beehive that are filled with honey.
      Either way, it relates to honey.. although the Hebrew word for honey is Devásh.

    • @martinkoubek3434
      @martinkoubek3434 Рік тому

      Thanks. I didn't look it up in the translator without knowing how to write it, vowels are really confusing in Hebrew- they can be marked by dots, or by a comma, or by one of silent letters (I call them simply ix| ypsilon)- ע|א , some of them also by letters h| j |v small- ו|י|ה ...

  • @BatuhanKipri
    @BatuhanKipri 2 роки тому

    איך זה אפשרי? אני רק מקשיב וכותב קצת. וכל כך הרבה למידה

  • @arielanayoiheziel3774
    @arielanayoiheziel3774 4 роки тому

    Ariel Anayo iHeziel (Sabra).

  • @florimarsanchez9729
    @florimarsanchez9729 Рік тому

    can you give me the exact meaning of לשׁוּף
    please

    • @Abilliph
      @Abilliph Рік тому +1

      Sorry, perhaps you spelled it wrong.
      Did you mean לשוב? Lashuv.. to return somewhere?

    • @ChannelTerminatedbyYouTube
      @ChannelTerminatedbyYouTube 9 місяців тому

      💀 bro that's a fucking alien letter

  • @juansalas7693
    @juansalas7693 4 роки тому

    Gréât !

  • @CoachingMusic
    @CoachingMusic Рік тому

    Can you help with the backwards e letter pronunciation?

    • @dylanriley7351
      @dylanriley7351 11 місяців тому +1

      Pop, P.P.P

    • @dylanriley7351
      @dylanriley7351 11 місяців тому +1

      The letter said like "pe" or pay or without the dot it's like phone, ph, f

    • @CoachingMusic
      @CoachingMusic 11 місяців тому

      Thanks so its like the p at the start of popcorn?

    • @CoachingMusic
      @CoachingMusic 11 місяців тому

      now I am a little confused so its like p in pe" or pay or with the dot ph or f like in funny?

    • @CoachingMusic
      @CoachingMusic 11 місяців тому +1

      Thanks @@dylanriley7351

  • @RudydeGroot
    @RudydeGroot 4 роки тому +2

    Did you know that most of the time, the 'r' is not even pronounced in German? (Check the - educating - video: 'How to pronounce "R" in German | Easy German 174' here on YT.) So comparing the 'r' sound with German is maybe not so good of an idea.. And in addition.. What is 'real Hebrew' anyways? The 'r' spoken in 'native' Hebrew is indeed very similar to the French 'r' but how was it pronounced when Awram was stil in Ur, Chaldea, Turkey? It's simple deduction to guess it would have sounded much more Arab, like the Russian 'r' (their letter 'p'). Also, the 'tzadi' would have been pronounced much more like the Yemenite 'ZZadi'. The pronunciation of the word 'taw' (the Hebrew letter 't') would have pronounced with a slight (and short) 'oh' sound as is heard in 'Chabad Hebrew'. So the Hebrew vowel 'a' was originally an 'oh'.

    • @anastasiamyers4073
      @anastasiamyers4073 4 роки тому

      I am a German speaker and you do pronounce r in German.

  • @WedersonWinchester
    @WedersonWinchester 2 роки тому

    I've give up to learn Hebrew.

  • @SuperMacDaddy66
    @SuperMacDaddy66 5 років тому +13

    You guys go too fast. Not enough time is spent on each vowel sound and the explanation of the nikkud marks.

  • @gudiphilips7928
    @gudiphilips7928 4 роки тому +2

    Todah *** sister shalom ** ani Philips from india Hyderabad I love Hebrew language I want to see ISERAL **** God kingdom *** todah

  • @marjbecker6515
    @marjbecker6515 3 роки тому

    When do you start learning the actual words? Because I'm learning the alphabet and the vowels but I dont know when do you start learning the actual words and how to do it

  • @robinscompere
    @robinscompere 5 місяців тому

    Zawkar?
    How do I pronounce Zawkar

  • @petramatkovic4122
    @petramatkovic4122 4 роки тому

    Can someone tell me about the word נִלְהָב ?
    Apparently it means enthusiastic, as an adjective. But I'm not sure how to pronounce it. I think it's 'Nil'hav'? That's how it said on the translator :1

  • @UseYourManners123
    @UseYourManners123 2 роки тому +1

    Much like Spanish.

  • @odraciradeur7634
    @odraciradeur7634 3 роки тому

    Way what is IPA

    • @ליבישמש
      @ליבישמש 3 роки тому

      Yafa? It means pretty/beautiful

    • @Hussaiin1
      @Hussaiin1 2 роки тому

      International Phonetic Alphabet

  • @edenknight777entertainment5
    @edenknight777entertainment5 4 роки тому

    Can you tell me how to pronounce “guardian” in Traditional Hebrew/Aramaic or even Phoenician?

    • @ofirgabbay5273
      @ofirgabbay5273 4 роки тому +2

      Shomer. שומר
      That is keeper or guardian

    • @edenknight777entertainment5
      @edenknight777entertainment5 4 роки тому

      ofir gabbay 𝐓hank you very much.

    • @ofirgabbay5273
      @ofirgabbay5273 4 роки тому +1

      @@edenknight777entertainment5 u welcome my friend!

    • @DonMrLenny
      @DonMrLenny 4 роки тому +2

      On doors in israel there is a small box called mezuza inside this box there is a sort of paper with prayers to protect the house from bad luck
      and on that box there is the latter ש (shin) that stands for shomer israel or gurdian of israel so shomer its gurdian or sentinel

    • @shevetlevi2821
      @shevetlevi2821 4 роки тому +1

      @@DonMrLenny Yes, the mezuza. It's said that the first one was the sacrificed lamb's blood that the Jews in Egypt put on their doorpost so the the Tenth plague would pass over them. Sometimes you'll see the letters Shin, Dalet, Yud.....Shaddai, which is one of G-d's names but is also an acronym for Shomer Deletot Yisrael, He Guards the Doors of Israel.

  • @thesilentway1086
    @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому +1

    I would comment on all that just some facts :
    1. That video is like what Hebrew has become in past 40 years.
    2. The language is as easy to pronounce as Spanish with also SH, TS, ayin and even CH is like Spanish jota (J).
    3. R like French and/or German is not the original issue - R used to be like in Spanish or Arabic and it is still pronounced that way either by some Mizrahi , some Ashkenazi, some Sephardi
    and some Israeli Arabs, that is supposed to be the correct way and that is how Hebrew used to be spoken in ancient times, Why R was transformed ? no clear because even in Yiddish
    only some used to pronounce R like German. until 1985 R used to be like that in Radio and TV - it was just not natural.
    4. Ayin (ע) chet (ח) and some other like t or GH was supposed to be like in Arabic but was simplified and surpressed.
    5. Many expressions that were used 40 yrs ago are old fashioned like the word ' tislam" (Ok, awesome) , instead of that the word "Sababa" (awesome , nice, wonderful) which is Arabic slang once was used only in Jerusalem by Mizrahi Jews is now used by everybody and the context is enlarged even as a word of agreement or just to say OK.

    • @Abilliph
      @Abilliph 3 роки тому

      once upon a time it was the right pronunciation, today it's usually the wrong pronunciation.
      Hebrew doesn't try to be the Hebrew spoken in ancient times, it's a living language... Why aren't you commenting on how Greek or Arabic changed?? these are the new rules of the continuation of biblical Hebrew, the pronunciation changed many times in the last 3000 years, by the influences of many languages, like Arabic, Aramaic, Greek, Spanish and more... If you want the original, you can always establish a community who would speak in a reconstructed version of it.

    • @thesilentway1086
      @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому +2

      @@Abilliph "Why aren't you commenting on how Greek or Arabic changed?" if I would have to answer to that question it would be simply because I know very little Arabic and null Greek in order to make any opinion about it, Hebrew I know and I was just commenting for others (as a Hebrew speaker) to know better, as for the accent I have no negative opinion about today's accent . I myself speak like that and not like Mizrahi or Polish Jew ( I am none of those), I do not think it is wrong or not wrong , I was just commenting about what Israeli society and medias used once to consider as correct back in 1960 and 70 , those times there was much less plurality of opinions. Today with Internet and social medias anybody is more free to express her/his views and will always find common areas with somebody without being blamed as weird.
      On top of all that , it is very important (as shown on video) to follow pronunciation rules as they are today since it is very easy to make embarrassing mistakes like the woman that went to the bank and wanted to ask where is the cashier and asked "Eifo ha kofa" ?(where is the monkey) instead of "EIfo Hakupa" (where is cash stand) or other that wanted to tell Reception clerk in Hotel that she is coming back and said : "Ani Hazira " ( I am a pig) instead of "Ani baa behazara" ( I am coming back).

    • @Abilliph
      @Abilliph 3 роки тому

      @@thesilentway1086 thanks for the clarification. I thought you had other motives behind your comment (like too many do). I guess I was wrong.

    • @thesilentway1086
      @thesilentway1086 3 роки тому +1

      @@Abilliph I can understand, many just try to make a point supposedly in order to create provocation just for fun. Many times they make an impression of a knowledgeable conversation , than it turns just to be a childish tease. BTW there were communities in the desert (Mizpe Ramon) that considered themselves Canaanites and tried to reconstruct Biblical Hebrew and Ancient Aramaic, that was an interesting community but quite weird during that time (90 ies) I think they had no economic means to continue their practice.

    • @Abilliph
      @Abilliph 3 роки тому

      @@thesilentway1086 yeah, the thing with reconstructing a language is that it normally won't work unless it's necessary. I guess those communities in the desert already had Arabic, like the Irish already has English, that makes reconstructing those languages much more difficult.
      Jews had no unifying language, and also a clear goal, which I think the others lacked.
      Provocations for fun... anti Israeli agendas... There are many reasons. :)

  • @sungod13
    @sungod13 4 роки тому

    hiii

  • @ezj8262
    @ezj8262 5 років тому

    Do vowels matter all that much in Hebrew?
    I'm just wondering this because --- the word "HELP" can be - Ezra, Ezer, Azar, Ozer, Ezar... and these have different pronuncations. What was the original Hebrew word before modern Hebrew, or do the differences not really matter? Thank you for your help. I wanted to ask a Native speaker, not someone who was guessing.

    • @ofirgabbay5273
      @ofirgabbay5273 5 років тому +2

      Hi, the differences in the words is the context of female and male subjects and for time past present and future. It is all the same verb ע.ז.ר so the 'ע' when u write in english makes it different andconfusing to a non hebrew speaker

    • @ofirgabbay5273
      @ofirgabbay5273 5 років тому +3

      And the world for help is the same word like ancient hebrew
      Azar- reffers to a male who helped (past form)
      Ozer- helping (in present)
      Azra- she helped ( refers ro a female and in a past form)

    • @ezj8262
      @ezj8262 5 років тому

      @@ofirgabbay5273 Thank you so much. Also, if you don't mind.... Is the correct pronunciation AY-ZAR or AW-ZAR?

    • @ofirgabbay5273
      @ofirgabbay5273 5 років тому +1

      @@ezj8262 nope there is no such words...maybe u tell me in english what u mean and i will write it for u. But..u will have to tell me to whom u r reffering to (man to female ect. And the time u are using ( past present or future)

    • @ofirgabbay5273
      @ofirgabbay5273 5 років тому

      @@ezj8262 do u mean azar? For a male person who helped someone?

  • @lukestutzman7093
    @lukestutzman7093 2 роки тому

    Am I the only one who came here because I have to sing George's prayer from the Wedding Singer?

  • @sarahkhan.1987
    @sarahkhan.1987 2 роки тому

    I dont know what am doing here? 😆

  • @DedekindMusic
    @DedekindMusic Рік тому

    😀😃😄

  • @hcn6708
    @hcn6708 9 місяців тому

    I don't wanna sound like a native speaker of Modern Hebrew so no thank you, I'll keep rolling those Rs where they should be: The tip of my tongue
    And also: Pronouncing the Sadi correctly

  • @arielanayoiheziel3774
    @arielanayoiheziel3774 4 роки тому +1

    Ariel Anayo iHeziel was born as a Jew but leaves in West Africa South East Nigeria

  • @amalgireesh2860
    @amalgireesh2860 4 роки тому

    how to pronounce little in hebrew

  • @maruhabte218
    @maruhabte218 5 років тому +2

    John 11 (KJV) - ዮሃንስ
    25: Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live:
    26: And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?
    27: She saith unto him, Yea, Lord: I believe that thou art the Christ, the Son of God, which should come into the world.

    • @edenknight777entertainment5
      @edenknight777entertainment5 4 роки тому +3

      Maru Habte Jesus is not the correct transliteration of Yeshua it’s actually Joshua. Jesus comes from a Latin/Greek translation Iesus which is inaccurate. So the correct Hebrew-to-English translation is Joshua.

  • @kociogon3176
    @kociogon3176 5 років тому +6

    Yaraa is most beautiful woman in earth :)

    • @shrk128
      @shrk128 5 років тому +7

      rest of Israel: *hold my foreskin*

  • @InfinitePrandora
    @InfinitePrandora 5 років тому +13

    חח תנו לייק מי שישראלי

    • @mataucx
      @mataucx 5 років тому

      שעה לפני, נייס

  • @sharonsananes8207
    @sharonsananes8207 4 роки тому +3

    Sadly the English speaking teacher doesn't know how to pronounce the Hebrew speaking teacher name - kind of wired.

  • @sarahkhan.1987
    @sarahkhan.1987 2 роки тому

    Hebrew sounds like Pashtu... National Language of Afghanistan.

  • @itsmitko7
    @itsmitko7 4 роки тому +1

    שלום (:
    Nah im just using google translate

  • @LostLakeLass
    @LostLakeLass 3 роки тому

    Why give examples of mistakes, that just gets into your head

  • @chinafloyd3831
    @chinafloyd3831 5 років тому

    🌹🌹🌹🌹☕☕

  • @akd7576
    @akd7576 5 років тому

    Ayin ע in hebrew pronounced like alef א

  • @dmoney17
    @dmoney17 3 роки тому

    It’s a yoffi

  • @arielanayoiheziel3774
    @arielanayoiheziel3774 4 роки тому +1

    Ariel Anayo iHeziel is a Jew. He leaves West Africa South East Nigeria.

  • @melaninrichblessdhighlyfavored
    @melaninrichblessdhighlyfavored 2 роки тому

    😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣 like a "native" ..

  • @josefomo3348
    @josefomo3348 4 роки тому

    Pronounce נצרן, please

  • @DannyDeZman
    @DannyDeZman 3 роки тому

    Geile Jüdin!

    • @DannyDeZman
      @DannyDeZman 3 роки тому

      @PŘØ B§ ☔ŤHÊ ÑÌÑJÃ WÃŤĚŘ🍹MC I'm self a jew. Lol