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Introduction to Ancient Hebrew Part 1 of 7

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Uploaded by on Feb 10, 2009

Proper Biblical Interpretation through the study of the Ancient Hebrew alphabet, language, culture and the Bible. This video discusses the relationship between the Hebrew words of the Bible and the Ancient Hebrew culture.

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Education

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Uploader Comments (ancienthebreworg)

  • All your videos are so good and appreciated so much! When will you be continuing the alphabet...it stopped @ gimmel...would so love more!

    Adonai bless and keep you...

  • @hisimagenme Thank you very much, I appreciate that. I have a unique work schedule with the company I work. I do contract work at Nuclear facilities, but I only work about 4 or 5 months out of the year, but when I do work it is about 80 hours a week. I have been working since September, but will be finished in March at which time I will be back home for most of the year and will be able to pick up on the series again.

Top Comments

  • @ancienthebreworg re- Cinderella story... fur is not a Russian word for fur :-D

    Fur is ''Meh'' (mekh) in Russian...

    ironically, fur is a Hebrew word. Fur is ''Parva'' in Hebrew.....

  • @ancienthebreworg aleph doesn't mean ''ox''.

    ox is ''shor'' in Hebrew.

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All Comments (113)

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  • @ancienthebreworg you claim ''shor'' to be in reference to the strengh, not ''alef''... yet in the word ''эm'' - mother you claim the ''alef'' there to be in reference to the strengh... besides since when water is a glue ?... glue sticks things together while water dissolves things... quite preposterous... av (alef + bet) is even more ridiculous... how would you ''interpret'' the word written using the same alef + bet, which means a necromancer's parafernalia ''ov'' ?...

  • @MrViTopol In Hebrew there can be several different words meaning the same thing, but each word is being specific in the function that thing. Shor is in reference to the strength of the ox, eleph is in reference to its leadership. Another example is the moon, yereyahh is in reference to its path in the sky and lavanah is in reference to its brightness.

  • @MrViTopol Let me try a different example. The Hebrew word for "mother" is אם (read from right to left), spelled aleph (on the right) and mem (on the left). The aleph is a picture of an ox head representing strength and the mem is a picture of water. Combined these mean "strong (aleph) water (mem)." The "strong water" is "glue," but also "mother," the glue of the family.

  • @ancienthebreworg no it doesn't make any sense at alllll

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