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Quiz about Biblical Hebrew Alphabet and other points
Quiz about Biblical Hebrew Alphabet and other points

Biblical Hebrew Alphabet and other points Quiz


Biblical Hebrew was fun to learn. It is less structured than Biblical Greek, so I enjoyed it. It is difficult for us Westerners to read right to left, however. Careful or you'll wind up trying to conjugate a proper noun!

A multiple-choice quiz by stubdoo. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
stubdoo
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
286,334
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
465
Last 3 plays: mallyb (6/10), Buddy1 (10/10), Guest 211 (4/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. True or False? The first letter of the Biblical Hebrew Alphabet is "aleph". It is a pronounced as a guttural and has no corresponding English equivalent?


Question 2 of 10
2. Are there 2 letters that look absolutely alike in Biblical Hebrew, except for one small aspect?


Question 3 of 10
3. Traditional Hebrew texts have always included the vowel points.


Question 4 of 10
4. This letter is the smallest in appearance, but also begins the name of the Jewish or Christian God. Can you guess which one? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. In Hebrew school, we learned a song about a vegetable that begins with this Hebrew letter. Can you name it? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Another song we learned uses two of the letters to begin both words. It was called "King David" in English; can you guess the Hebrew letters' names? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. One of my favorite times in Hebrew school was when we translated the Book of Jonah. Of course my favorite part is in Chapter 2, Verse 10, where he is thrown out of the fish's belly. What letter does the word meaning "vomit" begin with? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. One trick we always tried is to sound out the word and see if we can make out what it is phonetically. You cannot do this with one Hebrew word. It is the word for "Egypt". It begins with this letter of the alphabet. Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Besides "Shin" and "sin", there are two other Hebrew letters that look a lot alike. If you are not careful, you could mistake the one for the other. Unfortunately they do not make the same or similar sounds.


Question 10 of 10
10. Yes or No: There is a Hebrew Alphabet song.



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Most Recent Scores
Mar 22 2024 : mallyb: 6/10
Mar 09 2024 : Buddy1: 10/10
Mar 08 2024 : Guest 211: 4/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. True or False? The first letter of the Biblical Hebrew Alphabet is "aleph". It is a pronounced as a guttural and has no corresponding English equivalent?

Answer: True

While it is a artistic looking letter, it is barely recognizable in pronunciation. The vowel mark below it is the sound you recognize at first.
2. Are there 2 letters that look absolutely alike in Biblical Hebrew, except for one small aspect?

Answer: Yes

The letters sin (sounds like "seen") and Shin (Sounds like "Sheen") look just alike. They both look like the English "W". The exception is a point above the far right stem of the "W" which makes the letter "shin". If the dot is over the left stem of the letter, it is pronounced as an "S" sound. If the dot is on the right, then it is pronounced as a "Sh" sound.
3. Traditional Hebrew texts have always included the vowel points.

Answer: False

In traditional Hebrew texts there are no vowel points because in the earliest days Papyrus was a precious commodity and so they did not waste the space to place vowel points in the texts. The rabbis and teachers already knew what the word was and knew how it was to be pronounced.

You can go to the Jewish Virtual Library to learn more about this great language:
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/alephbet.html
4. This letter is the smallest in appearance, but also begins the name of the Jewish or Christian God. Can you guess which one?

Answer: Yod (the "o" sound is the long vowel sound)

The tradition in Hebrew text is that the Name of God has no vowel points and is never pronounced. It is traditional for the interpreter or Rabbi (Teacher) to substitute "Adonai" for the name that appears in the text itself. This is done out of respect and awe for their Lord.

There is also a tradition that states that if you know someone's name, then you have power over them. By simply uttering their name you have their attention. This was also believed to be true of God, thus they never fully copied God's name and eventually all who knew the name in full died off and never revealed it completely. There are educated guesses out there, but nothing definitive with proof.
5. In Hebrew school, we learned a song about a vegetable that begins with this Hebrew letter. Can you name it?

Answer: Mem

The song was called "Malafaphone". That is spelled phonetically. It was fun for awhile, but it is one of those songs that can get stuck in your head and you have trouble getting rid of it, even after you are tired of it.
6. Another song we learned uses two of the letters to begin both words. It was called "King David" in English; can you guess the Hebrew letters' names?

Answer: Dalet and Mem

Phonetically it is spelled "Daweed Melek". It, too, was fun at first; but after awhile we got tired of it also. It did teach us the letters very well. Songs are a great way to learn any new language. We should have done this in German and Spanish classes in middle school and high school.
7. One of my favorite times in Hebrew school was when we translated the Book of Jonah. Of course my favorite part is in Chapter 2, Verse 10, where he is thrown out of the fish's belly. What letter does the word meaning "vomit" begin with?

Answer: Quf

The word in Biblical Hebrew is (phonetically) "ki" . The last syllable has the guttural Aleph on the end; which as learned earlier, makes no audible noise.
8. One trick we always tried is to sound out the word and see if we can make out what it is phonetically. You cannot do this with one Hebrew word. It is the word for "Egypt". It begins with this letter of the alphabet.

Answer: Mem

The Biblical Hebrew word is "Mitzrim". That is not even close to how it sounds in English. It never failed that one of us at some point in Hebrew School would try to either conjugate this as a verb. We quickly learned that you don't conjugate proper nouns like names of countries.
9. Besides "Shin" and "sin", there are two other Hebrew letters that look a lot alike. If you are not careful, you could mistake the one for the other. Unfortunately they do not make the same or similar sounds.

Answer: True

The letters are "Chet", which makes a hard "k" sound and the other is "Tav" which makes the "t" sound. The difference is that the front leg of the letter "Tav" (the one on the left side of the letter) looks like a Swiss Alphorn or a Smoker's Tobacco Pipe lying on its side. "Chet" only has the straight leg in that same place.
10. Yes or No: There is a Hebrew Alphabet song.

Answer: Yes

It is a fun song. Unfortunately I do not know the tune we were taught, but there are versions out on the web that use other catchy tunes to help you remember them in order.
I hope you had fun playing.
Source: Author stubdoo

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor trammgr before going online.
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