Edit Vocabulary
| Hebrew | English Transliteration | Usual Transliteration | English |
|---|
Hebrew|אֳנִי | anee | ani | I |
Hebrew|אַתָּה | atah | ata | you (m. sg.) |
Hebrew|אַתְּ | at | at | you (f. sg.) |
Hebrew|הוּא | hoo | hu | he |
Hebrew|הִיא | hee | hi | she |
Hebrew|אֲנַחְנוּ | anakhnu | anakhnu or anachnu | we |
Hebrew|אַתֶּם | ahtem | atem | you (m. pl.) |
Hebrew|אַתֶּן | ahten | aten | you (f. pl.) |
Hebrew|הֵם | hem | hem | they (m. pl.) |
Hebrew|הֵן | hen | hen | they (f. pl.) |
EditGrammar
In general, the "to be" verb is not present in the
Hebrew language. So "He David" translates to "He is David". Or
Hebrew| שָׂרָה הִיא "She is Sarah".
EditExercises
EditWho is who?
This exercise using the following extra words:
Hebrew-Large| מִי who
mee,
Hebrew-Large| שָׁלוֹם Hello; Goodbye
shalom
and some names:
Hebrew-Large|שָׂרָה (Sarah),
Hebrew-Large|יַעֲקֹב (Jacob),
Hebrew-Large|משֶׁה (Moses),
Hebrew-Large|רָחֵל (Rachel)
Now try some simple sentences
Hebrew-Large| מִי הוּאHebrew-Large| הוּא יַעֲקֹבHebrew-Large| שָׁלוֹם שָׂרָה
EditWithout diacritic marks
Translate the following:
- אני
- את
- היא
- הוא
- אתה
EditAnswers
See
Hebrew/Personal Pronouns/Answers.
Edit Related lessons
Tags for "Hebrew/Personal Pronouns"