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| Â | Hebrew languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | These different languages were not necessarily more or less related to each other than to other Canaanite languages, and their traditional distinction as Hebrew languages is almost purely by religious belief. |  | | Of the varieties of Hebrew, only one — Modern Hebrew — survives as a spoken language today, and is one of the official languages of the State of Israel. |  | | Canaan whom Abrahamic religion believes to have been Hebrews who emigrated from the |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Hebrew_language
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| Â | Definition of Hebrew language |
 | | Hebrew is the primary official language of the state of Israel, (Arabic also has official language status). |  | | None are completely derived from Hebrew, but all are full of Hebrew loanwords. |  | | Hebrew Bible and the accompanying religious works in the original (see |
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http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Hebrew_language
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| Â | TINTIN LANGUAGES |
 | | Books, newspapers, and magazines published in Israel today are written in a Hebrew that is much the same as the language of the Bible. |  | | For over three millennia Hebrew has been the religious, and often the literary and secular, language of the Jewish people. |  | | After ceasing to exist as a spoken 1anguage about 250 B.C., it was reborn as a modern language in the 19th century, and today it is the principal language of the State of Israel. |
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http://lakrabo.tripod.com/hebrew.htm
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| Â | Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Hebrew languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Hebrew Bible was written in one Hebrew language (except for the brief sections in Aramaic which is also the language of the Zohar and Talmud). |  | | Besides Hebrew languages associated with the Canaanite language family, there are also languages spoken chiefly by Hebrews. |  | | Note that none of the various "Hebrews" that we have discussed so avidly recently (Tiberian Hebrew, Samaritan Hebrew, Standard Hebrew...) are on this list. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Hebrew_languages
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| Â | Review Article by Walid Saleh |
 | | The same can be said about introductions to the Hebrew Bible. |  | | Discrepancies between the Qur’anic version of a Biblical story and the one found in the Hebrew Bible led to accusations that the Qur’an had misunderstood the Bible or was muddled or incapable of getting the story right. |  | | Despite the fact that these two communities were linguistically separated for over a millennium and despite the phonetic peculiarities that each tradition developed, their readings are not mutually incomprehensible for, like Arabic, Hebrew is an alphabetic language. |
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http://www.riifs.org/review_articles/review_v5no2_walidsaleh.htm
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| Â | Hebrew font links |
 | | 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. |  | | 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). |
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http://cgm.cs.mcgill.ca/~luc/hebrew.html
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| Â | The Jewish-Languages List . Archives |
 | | This list of languages written in Hebrew is not yet complete: it does not include several central Iranian Jewish dialects (Kashani, Isfahani, Yazdi, and Kermani), Maltese in Hebrew, Genizah Latin in Hebrew, or Portuguese in Hebrew. |  | | Modern Hebrew is the language of the state of Israel, revived more than a century ago by a true linguistic pioneer, Eliezer Ben- Yehuda. |  | | The language of the conference is Hebrew, and due to budgetary limitations there will be no interpreting service available, but lectures in English are welcome. |
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http://petrarch.freeservers.com/jewishlanglist.html
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| Â | The Yiddish Voice דאָס ייִדישע קול |
 | | In Yiddish and Hebrew, with Hebrew letters, Windows Hebrew character set. |  | | 1908 Czernowitz Conference on the Yiddish Language, with many interesting articles about the conference, documents from the conference, and many images of historical persons, places, and things. |  | | 'Let's Hear Only Good News: Yiddish Blessings and Curses', 200 blessings and around 450 curses in Yiddish, English, Hebrew, and Russian. |
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http://www.klezmorim.com/
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| Â | Links related to The Lengthy List of Jewish Links |
 | | Hebrew Translating - To and from Hebrew, Yiddish, Aramaic, or Ladino and any other language. |  | | Many American Rabbis wrote seforim (Hebrew books) in the early part of the 20th century. |  | | Bilingual Hebrew - Methods of fostering, promoting, and maintaining Hebrew, Yiddish, and Ladino native language skills in children, and of maintaining these skills among the rest of us as we progress through life. |
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http://www.greenspun.com/boohoo/related.tcl?page_id=Jewish_Links
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| Â | Mizrahi Hebrew language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Mizrahi Hebrew language or Oriental hebrew language refers to any one of the dialects of |  | | As such, Mizrahi Hebrew is actually a blanket term for many dialects. |  | | Sephardi Hebrew is not considered one of these, although it has been spoken in the Middle East and |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mizrahi_Hebrew_language
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 | | Languages of community: the Jewish experience in the Czech lands. |  | | Ran Aaronsohn ; [translated from the Hebrew by Gila Brand]. |  | | Berkowitz, "Hebrew and Dissent." Zionist Culture and Western European Jewry before the First World War, pp. |
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http://www.cnrs.ubc.ca/hist342-relg332.htm
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| Â | Learn Now! |
 | | Pimsleur courses help people who need to speak another language quickly. |  | | Start speaking any language within 30 days or receive a full and courteous refund. |  | | Our courses took 40 years to develop and are now used by the FBI, CIA, and business professionals everywhere. |
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http://www.pimsleurapproach.com
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| Â | H-Net Editors Directory - Aviva Ben-Ur |
 | | Freelance Translator and Transliterator of Hebrew and Ladino manuscripts and documents (1998-1999) |  | | Hebrew/Portuguese/Spanish/Ladino Translator and Historical Consultant, The Woman Who Defied Kings: The Life and Times of Doña Gracia Nasi, a Jewish Woman Leader During the Renaissance, by Andrée Aelion Brooks, Paragon Books, 2002 (Summer 1998-2001) |  | | *“Sephardim and the Land of Israel: Jewish Nationalism and Hebrew Education Among the Ladino-Speaking Jews of New York,” Association for Jewish Studies (December 1997) |
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http://www.h-net.msu.edu/people/editors/show.cgi?ID=124689
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| Â | Professor Dan Michman |
 | | He came to Israel as a child in 1957, when his father, Joseph Michman (Melkman) was appointed Chairman of Yad Vashem. |  | | After his military service, he studied Jewish history and Hebrew language at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he earned his doctorate in 1978 by writing a dissertation on Jewish refugees from Germany in Holland in 1933–1940. |  | | Michman has published numerous books and articles in different languages on the history of Dutch Jewry, Israeli society, and various aspects of Holocaust research—historiography, problems of Jewish refugees and migration, religious life, Judenrat and leadership, resistance, Western Europe, the survivors, etc. |
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http://www.yad-vashem.org.il/about_yad/departments/institute/michman.html
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| Â | Jerusalem Books Ltd. |
 | | by Melamed, E.Z. Magnes Press, Hebrew Univ, 2004. |  | | by Weinfeld, M. Magnes Press, Hebrew Univ, 2004. |  | | (TESHUROT LAAVISHUR \ STUDIES IN THE BIBLE AND THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST IN HEBREW) |
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http://www.jerusalembooks.co.il/new.asp
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