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Hebrew
[hee-broo]
noun
a member of the Semitic peoples inhabiting ancient Palestine and claiming descent from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; an Israelite.
a Semitic language of the Afroasiatic family, the language of the ancient Hebrews, which, although not in a vernacular use from 100 b.c. to the 20th century, was retained as the scholarly and liturgical language of Jews and is now the national language of Israel. Heb
Hebrew
/ ˈːː /
noun
the ancient language of the Hebrews, revived as the official language of Israel. It belongs to the Canaanitic branch of the Semitic subfamily of the Afro-Asiatic family of languages
a member of an ancient Semitic people claiming descent from Abraham; an Israelite
archaica Jew
adjective
of or relating to the Hebrews or their language
archaicJewish
Hebrew
The language of the Hebrews, in which the Old Testament was written. It is the language of the modern state of Israel.
Other Word Forms
- non-Hebrew noun
- pre-Hebrew adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of Hebrew1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Hebrew1
Example Sentences
"We would sit in silence, just a bunch of women dressed in white, holding signs in Hebrew, Arabic and English saying: 'compassion', 'peace', 'nutritional security'," she told me.
It comes from In the City of Slaughter, which is widely regarded as the most significant Hebrew poem of the 20th Century.
The Israeli Defense Forces said on its Hebrew X account that it had mobilised troops for "Operation Gideon's Chariots" to seize "strategic areas" of the strip.
Israel has strong form in this category, and sets the bar again with New Day Will Rise, a melancholy piano ballad sung in a mixture of English, French and Hebrew.
But they represent the global diversity of L.A.’s half-million Jews, melding the Hebrew and English spoken at day care with the Persian or Yiddish learned at home.
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