'히브리어 알파벳'에 해당되는 글 23건

  1. 2011.06.24 300-Shin
  2. 2011.06.24 400-Tav
  3. 2011.05.11 히브리어 알파벳 배우기/동영상
posted by isaiah_43 2011. 6. 24. 22:01
BS''D
The Letter Shin / Sin
The Letter Shin / Sin
Alphabet
Resh Tav

Chart

Phonetics

The twenty-first letter of the Hebrew alphabet is called “Shin” (pronounced “sheen”) and has the sound of “sh” as in “shy.”

In modern Hebrew, the letter Shin can appear in three forms:

Forms of Shin

Manual Print (block)

Write the manual print version (or "block" version) of Shin as follows:

Learn Hebrew

Shin Block

Two strokes are used to create this letter.

Hebrew Script (cursive)

And the cursive version:

Audio Tanakh

Shin Script

This letter looks a little like an English cursive lowercase “e.”

Write the letter Shin (from right to left) in both manual print and script several times:

Practice

Practice Grid

Note: The sole difference between the letter Shin and the letter Sin (pronounced “seen”) is the presence or absence of the dot. If a dot appears to the upper right of the letter, pronounce “sh”; if it appears to the left, pronounce “s.”  

The Letter
Sin

Sin not Shin

Summary

Shin / Sin Summary

Note also that some academic Hebrew books use an “s” with a caret on top to transliterate Sin and reserve “s” for Samekh. On this web site, we transliterate both Sin and Samech as “s.”

The Four-Headed Shin

4-headed Shin

The letter Shin appears engraved on both sides of the head tefillin. On the right side, the Shin has three heads, while on the left side it possesses four. If you look closely, it is possible to see an additional three-headed Shin formed from the spaces between the four heads. The three-headed Shin is the Shin of this world, while the four- headed Shin is the Shin of the World to Come.

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'이스라엘 > 히브리어 알파벳' 카테고리의 다른 글

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히브리어 알파벳 배우기/동영상  (0) 2011.05.11
posted by isaiah_43 2011. 6. 24. 22:00
Hebrew for Christians
BS''D
The Letter Tav
Alphabet
Shin/Sin

Chart

Phonetics

Manual Print (block)

Hebrew Script (cursive)

Practice

Dageshim

Summary

The Letter Tav

The last (i.e., 22nd) letter of the Hebrew alphabet is “Tav,” which has the sound of “t” as in “tall.”

In modern Hebrew, the letter Tav can appear in three forms:

Forms of Tav

Write the manual print version (or "block" version) of Tav as follows:

Tav Block

Note that the first stroke overhangs the second stroke, and that the second stroke has a small “foot” that goes to the left.

And the cursive version:

Tav Script

This letter is similar to the print version except that the first stroke slopes down from the top right to the baseline.

Write the letter Tav (from right to left) in both manual print and script several times:

Practice Grid

Note: The letter Tav can also take a dot, or dagesh mark. In ancient Hebrew, a Tav without the dot was pronounced “th” (e.g., as in Sabbath). In the Ashkenazi tradition, Tav without the dot is pronounced “s” (as in “Shabbos”), but in modern Hebrew, Tav with or without the dagesh is pronounced simply as “t.”   

Tav Summary
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Hebrew for Christians
Copyright © John J. Parsons
All rights reserved.

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'이스라엘 > 히브리어 알파벳' 카테고리의 다른 글

90-Tsade  (0) 2011.06.24
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200-Resh  (0) 2011.06.24
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히브리어 알파벳 배우기/동영상  (0) 2011.05.11
posted by isaiah_43 2011. 5. 11. 23:32













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