Hebrēisc sprǣc


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Þis ȝeƿrit hæfþ ƿordcƿide on Nīƿum Englisce.
Hebrēisc (עברית [‘Ivrit])
Gesprocen in: Israhēl
Landscipe: Israhēl and ōðru land
Getæl sprecera: ~6 milliona (inhabbende app. 500,000 non-Jewish speakers in Gaza/West Bank). 195,375 in the United States.1

1United States Census 2000 PHC-T-37. Ability to Speak English by Language Spoken at Home: 2000. Table 1a.

Mǣþ: not in top 100
Genetic classification: Afro-Asiatic
Semitisc
Middelsemitisc
Northwest
Canaanite
Hebrēisc
Ambihtlicu mǣþ
Ambihtlicu sprǣc: Israhēl
Regulated by: Academy of the Hebrew Language
(האקדמיה ללשון העברית)
Sprǣce tācna
ISO 639-1 he
ISO 639-2 heb
SIL HBR
Sēo ēac: Sprǣc – Getalu sprǣca

Sēo Andwearde Hebrēisce sprǣc is Semitisc sprǣc of the Afroasiatic sprǣccynn. The core of the Hebrew Bible, the Torah (which Crīstendōm and Judaism traditionally hold to have been first recorded in the time of Moses 3,300 years ago), is written in (Biblical) Classical Hebrew. Iudēas have always called it the לשון הקודש Lashon ha-Kodesh ("Sēo Godcunde Sprǣc") as þā fyrngewritu gewriten in þisse sprǣce wurdon gesmēad hālig.

Sēo ēac

  • Hebrēisc stæfrǣw
  • Niqqud (vowel points)

Ūtanwearde bendas

Wikipedia
Wicipǣdian gewritu gewriten in þisse sprǣce sind gefunden æt þǣm
Hebrēisc sprǣc Wicipǣdian

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