 Hey guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosel here I just uploaded a video on how to write zip codes in how to find zip codes in Israel using Doha You saw a handy lookup tool and just regarding the whole topic of sending mail in Israel There's one more thing I wanted to cover That if you're just brand new to Israel, this might be confusing you How to write your apartment number in Israel because most people here are living in apartments in cities And so there are a couple of conventions now I find this comment on a reddit thread in the israel subreddit and this guy It goes back through his received mail and identifies a few different conventions I'm just going to talk through them for people unfamiliar So, um, firstly if you are writing mail from abroad to your relative in Israel, etc Then you can write Mail labels in Hebrew. I know that might sound stupid. That's some people would wonder is it possible You know, is English is not an official language. Somehow it is possible. I guess the post people must have to know English Um, so Daniel Rosel, Ben, Gourion, 13, apartment five So if you do this, uh, and I just did a video on how to find someone's zip code Uh, denoted here by sfsfsf Then that should do the job that should get to your recipient Now what if you're signing up for walled or 10 beast or you are buying something online From an Israeli e-commerce website you found through a zap. So these things do exist So in that case, uh, here are the ways, uh, you can Denote, um, your address. So this guy shows one that I haven't actually seen before in practical life And that is, uh, abbreviating dirah Apartment as Dalit. So you can see here. It's Ben, Gourion, 13, uh, dirah, 6, Israel, Tel Aviv, Yaffo, zip code Um, but this is one that I have seen all the time. So it's your name Ben, Gourion, 13, al Shesh Israel. That's how it's written, uh, in Hebrew So, and this is where I say it's confusing because, uh, Hebrew is read from right to left But the way you read this it's obviously more logical to do building than apartment So you have to you actually read the number left to right And because mixing Hebrew and English when you're typing is a disaster, uh, this can be, uh, by a T This can be problematic nevertheless it can be done So just to be aware of this is how this thing is read and this is how it read if it works So that does not mean Ben, Gourion, 16, Apartment 30 means Ben, Gourion, 30, Apartment 16 So let's go back to my example here. So it would be Daniel Rosil And for some reason his radio is always pronounced my name Rosin Hill for reasons that are unclear to me still or Rosil got all kinds of interest and permutations Ben Gourion, I probably spelled Ben, Gourion, 30, Apartment 30 Now you may notice that that's actually No, that's actually fine. Uh, but if I did it the other way around it would be problematic if I did 5 slash 30 So that's been Gourion, 30 slash 5 Tel Aviv, Yaffo and then your zip code. So that's basically it. Um, as this guy says you can also do I'm sure if you wrote Dira it would work too I actually prefer this approach because it's less ambiguous Ben, Gourion, 30, Dira, Hamish or you could do Ben, Gourion, 30 And as he recommends, uh, Dalit, I'm trying to find this key in Hebrew. There we go Dira, Hamish, so all those would work But the most common one you will see is really this slash thing in my experience and that's just how Israelis denote addresses that have a building number and An apartment number. Hope that video was useful. Thank you for watching