flashcard:lesson1:say_alef
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- | alef (the name of this letter | + | ===== Pronounce |
- | bet (sounds like it looks, or “beyt” or “bait”, or in its softer form, vet, or veyt or vait) | + | |
- | gimel (geem-el, the name starts with a hard g sound like in gear, not a J sound, and the end sounds like the “le” at the end of “Bible”; | + | <WRAP center centeralign round box 60%> |
- | dalet (pronounced like dahl - et. the soft from sounds like thal-et … where the “th” makes the voiced (buzzing) sound like at the beginning of “those”, | + | <wrap medium> |
- | heh (pronounced like “hey!”) | + | </ |
- | vav (also written as waw, the “a” is like in “father”, | + | |
- | zeyin (rhymes with “sign” but starts with a “z”) | + | #: Click for Answer |
- | khet (also written heth, het, chet, cheth. this might be the hardest letter name to say. it starts with a throaty friction sound like the end of “loch” in lochness monster.) | + | <WRAP centeralign> |
- | tet (i say tet like it looks, but “teyt” is also used by some) | + | <wrap medium>the name of this letter |
- | yod (or written yud, if I said it rhymes with blood but also rhymes with good, it's somewhere in between there. It doesn' | + | the stress |
- | kaf (its name sounds like the English word “cough”, | + | </ |
- | lamed (law - med, emphasis on the first syllable, rhymes with Muhammed) | + | :# |
- | mem (like it looks, mem, or meym) this letter has an alternate final form which is shown in the bottom row of the chart - and its the only one where the final form isn't actually swoopy. | + | |
- | nun (like the time of day “noon”, not like The Flying Nun 😄 ) this letter | + | |
- | samek (saw - mehk) | + | |
- | eyin (its name is just like zeyin but without | + | |
- | peh (like the English word “pay”, or in its softer form, “fay”) this letter has an alternate final form which is shown in the bottom row of the chart | + | |
- | tsadi (the first sound is like the ts at the end of the english word “lots” … tsaw -dee) this letter has an alternate final form which is shown in the bottom row of the chart | + | |
- | qof (also spelled quf, to distinguish it from kaf I pronounce it like koof, or koaf) | + | |
- | resh (best if you can use the slightly rolled R sound to say its name, but still understandable if you use the American rhotic R) | + | |
- | shin (shin or sheen, but it also has another form where it sounds different, and in that case it is pronounced sin or seen) | + | |
- | tav (where the “a” is like the one in the word father) | + |
flashcard/lesson1/say_alef.1730057289.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/10/27 19:28 by jeffd