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| Â | Hebrew Language Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography |
 | | None are completely derived from Hebrew, but all are full of Hebrew loanwords. |  | | In practice, there is also Ashkenazi Hebrew, still widely used in Ashkenazi Jewish services and studies in Israel and abroad. |  | | Hebrew has two kinds of stress ( taa'm): on the last syllable ( milra') and on the penultimate syllable (the one preceding the last, mile'l). |
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http://www.localcolorart.com/search/encyclopedia/Hebrew_language/
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| Â | Congregation Beth Sholom's History |
 | | Beth Sholom means "House of Peace." Actually, the word for "House of" would be more like Bet in modern Hebrew, or Bes in Ashkenazi Hebrew. |  | | Thus, our Congregation's name means House of Peace, even if it is a combination of a misinterpreted transliteration of a Sephardic word, and the Ashkenazi pronounciation of another. |  | | Most often, when you see the Hebrew word for "peace" it is spelled Shalom. |
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http://www.alaska.net/~sholom/history.html
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| Â | Hebrew alphabet |
 | | The number of letters in the Hebrew alphabet, their order, their names, and their phonetic values are virtually identical to those of the Aramaic alphabet, as both Hebrews and Arameans borrowed the Phoenician alphabet for their uses during the end of the 2nd millennium BC. |  | | The Hebrew alphabet is a set of 22 letters used for writing the Hebrew language. |  | | This script was borrowed by the Hebrews during the 12th or 11th century BC, and around the 9th century BC, a distinct Hebrew variant, the original "Hebrew script", emerged. |
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/hebrew_alphabet
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| Â | Hebrew at Dartmouth/Faculty/Lewis H. Glinert_Major Publications |
 | | 'Linguistics and language teaching: The implications for Modern Hebrew', Hebrew Annual Review 3, pp.105-127, 1979. |  | | 'Quantifiers and determiners in teaching Hebrew as a second language', Orahot 10, pp.36-45, 1978. |  | | 'A unified framework for identity and similarity structures: Israeli Hebrew kmo', in Paul Wexler, A. Borg and S. Somekh (eds.) Studia Linguistica et Orientalia Memoriae Haim Blanc Dedicata, Otto Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden. |
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http://www.dartmouth.edu/~damell/hebrew/arti_g.html
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| Â | Encyclopedia: Ashkenazi |
 | | The term Ashkenazi also refers to the nusach ( Hebrew, "liturgical tradition") used by Ashkenazi Jews in their Siddur (prayer book). |  | | Also, traditionally, ( Yiddish); now typically the language of whatever country they live in (including Modern Hebrew in Israel). |  | | In the first half of the eleventh century Hai Gaon refers to questions that had been addressed to him from Ashkenaz, by which he undoubtedly means Germany. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Ashkenazi
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| Â | Encyclopedia article on Abraham [EncycloZine] |
 | | Abraham ( אברהם "Father/Leader of many", Standard Hebrew Avraham, Tiberian Hebrew ʾAḇrāhām ; Arabic ابراهيم Ibrāhīm) is the patriarch of Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. |  | | The account of his life is found in the Book of Genesis, beginning in Chapter 11, at the close of a genealogy of the sons of Shem (which includes among its members Eber, the eponym of the Hebrews). |  | | In the New Testament Abraham is mentioned prominently as a man of faith (see e.g., Hebrews 11), and the apostle Paul uses him as an example of salvation by faith (in e.g. |
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http://encyclozine.com/Abraham
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| Â | Ashkenazi |
 | | Ashkenazi and Sephardi tunes for both prayers and Torah reading are different. |  | | For the Ashkenazi Jews the studies of Hebrew, the Torah and the Talmud was more than just a way of understanding their religion, it was also a way of protecting themselves against the influence of the societies around them. |  | | The name "askhenaz" was the name that the Jews themselves used for Germany, a name taken from Genesis 10:3. |
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http://i-cias.com/e.o/jud_ashk.htm
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| Â | Jewish Heritage Online Magazine |
 | | Kabbalistic elements were also featured in a remedy book from Yemen, written in Hebrew in the nineteenth century, but certainly copied from earlier sources. |  | | An Ashkenazi Hebrew manuscript recommended use of an amulet in a different way for protection against a future miscarriage: the names of three angels |  | | were written in Hebrew on kosher parchment and put in a grave together with the last aborted fetus. |
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http://www.jhom.com/lifecycle/birth/magical.htm
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| Â | Faculty at the Hebrew University |
 | | Jerusalem/Tel Aviv: Dvir Publishing House, 1984; (5) The Book of Genesis in the Bible, the Old Versions and the Ancient Jewish Literature (Monograph Series, co-authored with Y. Zakovitch, in Hebrew). |  | | Biblical Hebrew and Biblical Aramaic (phonology, morphology and syntax) and northwest Semitic background; linguistic approach of the medieval biblical commentators and the Hebrew reflected in thier commentaries; syntax and lexicology of medieval Ashkenazi Hebrew, development of syntactical structures in Hebrew. |  | | Newman, 1976; (11) Commentary on the Book of Genesis (in Hebrew). |
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http://orion.huji.ac.il/orion/faculty.shtml
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| Â | Oak Knoll Books & Oak Knoll Press |
 | | The first printer of books with Hebrew letters was probably Abraham, son of Solomon Conat of Mantua, who had formerly been a copyist of books. |  | | The most famous printers of Hebrew books at that time were Abraham Conat (mentioned above), Meshullam Cusi, Joseph Gunzenhauser and his son ‘Azriel, and the Ashkenazi printers Yehoshu‘a, Solomon and Gershom in Soncino near Milan. |  | | Out of 50,000 incunabula, about 175 in Hebrew characters have survived. |
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http://www.oakknoll.com/bookexcerpt.php?booknr=71692
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| Â | Search Results for Ashkenazi - Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Though cantors (hazzanim) still use such a book, mahzor has come to mean the festival... |  | | Jewish prayer or blessing recited over a cup of wine immediately... |  | | Any member of the Jewish community, or their descendants, who lived... |
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http://www.britannica.com/search?query=Ashkenazi&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
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| Â | Hebrew font links |
 | | We also find the rather complete Unicode truetype fonts Chrysanthi-Unicode (2001) and Roman-Unicode (2001), which cover all European, Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, Cyrillic, Thai and Indic languages, and provide kana as well (but not kanji). |  | | The company sells fonts for the following languages: Amharic, Aksara Kaganga, Arabic, Armenian, Balinese, Burmese, Cambodian, Chinese, Coptic, Devanagari (Hindi/Marathi/Nepali), Farsi, Georgian, Glagolitic, Gujerathi, Gurmukhi (Punjabi), Hebrew, Japanese, Javanese, Jawi, Kannada, Korean, Laotian, Lontarak, Malayalam, Old Bulgarian, Oriya, Pushto, Sindhi, Sinhalese, Surat Pustaha, Syriac, Tamil, Telugu, Thai, Urdu, Vietnamese. |
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http://cgm.cs.mcgill.ca/~luc/hebrew.html
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| Â | The Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript Of The Mid-15th Century From The Collection Of The British Library. - BEN ... |
 | | Keywords: (Key Words: Passover, Haggadah, Art, Illustrations, Calligraphy, Pesach, Judaica, Seder, Joel Ben Simeon, Feibusch Ashkenazi, Religion, Judaism, Bible, Jewish Holidays). |  | | The Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript Of The Mid-15th Century From The Collection Of The British Library. |  | | Title: The Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript Of The Mid-15th Century From The Collection Of The British Library. |
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http://www.adinfinitumbooks.com/si/10699X1.html
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| Â | Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript of the Mid-15th Century from the Collections of the British Library David ... |
 | | Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript of the Mid-15th Century from the Collections of the British Library David Goldstein |  | | Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript of the Mid-15th Century from the Collections of the British Library |  | | Below you will see a list of US book stores, along with their stock and price details for Ashkenazi Haggadah: A Hebrew Manuscript of the Mid-15th Century from the Collections of the British Library by David Goldstein. |
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http://www.bookkoob.com/book/0810918196.htm
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| Â | Gaza |
 | | In Arabic it is written غزة Ġazzah ;, in the Hebrew alphabet it is עזה, in Standard Hebrew it is ʿAzza, in Tiberian Hebrew it is Ġazzāh or ʿAzzāh. |  | | It has been variously reported to derive from the Canaanite, Hebrew, and Persian languages. |  | | It sometimes called Gaza City to distinguish it from the Gaza Strip. |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/G/Gaza.htm
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| Â | vitae |
 | | Assistant, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, 1970-1973 |  | | Instructor-Doctor, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, 1974-1975 |  | | Instructor, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, 1973-1974 |
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http://phyvax.ir.miami.edu:8001/ashkenazi/vitae.htm
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| Â | Glossary |
 | | In Judaism, atonement or reconciliation between God and humanity is achieved by the process of repentance ( teshuvah), seeking forgiveness and making amends with our fellow human beings. |  | | The word has no connection with Noah's Ark, which is teyvah in Hebrew. |  | | A room or school where Hebrew is taught. |
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http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/gloss.html
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| Â | Hebrew Learning on the Web |
 | | MILINGUA's Hebrew Learning Portal offers Web-based Hebrew learning and Hebrew courses. |  | | Through its constantly expanding texts and daily vocabulary lessons, MILINGUA puts you in direct contact with the Hebrew spoken the very day you access the site, introducing new concepts as they are created in the press and on the street. |  | | The low-cost yearly subscription allows you to repeat the lessons and to study the ever-expanding resources as many times as you need. |
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http://www.milingua.com
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| Â | BAYT Hebrew Calendar |
 | | The calendar only has Ashkenazi pronuciation for hebrew month names. |  | | Welcome to the BAYT Hebrew (Jewish) Calendar page.This form generates a calendar month with all the corresponding hebrew dates, jewish holidays, parsha readings, omer counts, and candlelighting and havdala times. |  | | The calendar can only be used from the year 1 C.E. onward and loses its accuracy after the year 2999 C.E. The times that are calculated are based on sunset times. |
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http://www.bayt.org/calendar
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| Â | JEWISH MUSIC INSTITUTE - Ashkenazi Music |
 | | The vernacular language was Yiddish, based on medieval German with Slavic and Hebrew words and written in Hebrew script. |  | | 'Ashkenazi' (Hebrew for Germany) refers to the Jews who settled in the Rhineland of South West Germany and Northern France from about the third century CE. |
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http://www.jmi.org.uk/ashkenazimusic
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