(Part 2) Best products from r/hebrew

We found 15 comments on r/hebrew discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 34 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/hebrew:

u/chokin · 2 pointsr/hebrew

This is what you need.

http://www.amazon.com/Hippocrene-English-Hebrew-Hebrew-English-Conversational-Dictionary/dp/0781801370

In my opinion though you'd be better to spend just a little time learning to read Hebrew. For the first year of learning Hebrew I didn't bother with learning to read and it was a mistake.

Once I could read read I started to recognize the Shoreshim (root letters) as part of words and, from there, all sorts of patterns became apparent and I could start to infer meaning from context and the shoresh.

Hope the link helps.

u/ihamsa · 1 pointr/hebrew

Hmm. Why do you need one? I haven't used any, but this one looks pretty solid.

u/ibrewaletx · 4 pointsr/hebrew

As far as an internet resource for biblical Hebrew, this is top to bottom, the best. Videos taking you from the very basics up.
He also has a book teaching biblical Hebrew that I believe this video instruction follows.

u/asaz989 · 3 pointsr/hebrew

I had this book when I was little; don't know if there are new editions available. It has those nice old tables. [EDIT: found another version that might be the one I remember; 201 didn't sound like the right number. The cover I remember was just closer to the (prettier) old version.)

I also found this convenient site online [EDIT: changed link to one that actually knows Hebrew phonology], though it's a bit weird in that it titles the entries by infinitive; usually in Hebrew grammar the singular male third-person past tense is considered the "base" form. But you can search by any conjugation, so it's all good.

My personal advice, and the philosophy used by most such references - treat the binyanim as etymology, not conjugation. There are very regular rules for plugging in a root to a binyan, but there are no rules for figuring out the meaning based on root + binyan, except for the passive/active pairs of binyanim which are very useful to keep in mind while learning conjugations. But for these purposes, just focus on the tense-and-pronoun (or aspect-and-pronoun) variants.

u/Holylander · 1 pointr/hebrew

Yes it does , they are only similar though, not 1 to 1.
أَفعَلَ IV <-> הקטיל
اِتفَعَّلَ V <-> התפעל
VII <-> נפעל
See https://www.amazon.com/Arabic-Grammar-Dover-Language-Guides/dp/0486441296/ for more info.

u/ari6av · 2 pointsr/hebrew

I just double checked - this one in particular is from the preface to the first edition of this book. The photo in the OP is of an edition that's laid out differently from mine, but the text is the same. What gave it away for me was the Cambridge 1950, and that I remember seeing the roshei teivos when I first got the book a few years back.