The essentials of Hebrew morphology, syntax, and vocabulary taught by Dr. Bartelt.
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003. Chapter 1.1.B
Andrew Bartelt
The Hebrew Alphabet, part 3: Teth, Yod, Kaph, Lamed, Mem, Nun, Samekh, Ayin, Pe, Sadhe, Qoph, Resh, Sin, Shin, Taw.
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004. Chapter 1.1.C
Andrew Bartelt
Forms of certain Hebrew letters when they are the last letter in a word.
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007. Chapter 1.2.C
Andrew Bartelt
Vowels, Mater Letters, and Syllables. Mater letters are consonants that indicate vowels.
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011. Chapter 1.3.A
Andrew Bartelt
Vowels, Mater Letters, and Syllables. The composite shewa is a reduced vowel.
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013. Chapter 1.3.E.2
Andrew Bartelt
The dagesh forte is a dot in a Hebrew letter that indicates a duplicated letter.
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015. Chapter 2.2
Andrew Bartelt
Vowels reduce when they are two syllables before the accented syllable.
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016. Chapter 2.2.B
Andrew Bartelt
Segolate nouns follow a different pattern in the singular, but are regular in the plural.
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019. Chapter 3.1.B.2.a
Andrew Bartelt
Gutturals will add the definite article with either compensative lengthening (Aleph, Ayin, Resh) or virtual doubling (He, Heth).
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020. Chapter 3.1.B.2.b
Andrew Bartelt
Gutturals will add the definite article with either compensative lengthening (Aleph, Ayin, Resh) or virtual doubling (He, Heth).
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021. Chapter 3.1.B.3
Andrew Bartelt
Some gutturals (Resh, He, Heth) take the definite article with a segol in certain circumstances.
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022. Chapter 3.2
Andrew Bartelt
There are three types of prepositions: independent words, proclitic, prefixed.
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023. Chapter 3.2.C
Andrew Bartelt
The Rule of Shewa resolves the issue of having two vocal shewas in a row.
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024. Chapter 3.2.C.2
Andrew Bartelt
The Rule of Shewa resolves the issue of having two vocal shewas in a row.
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025. Chapter 3.2.D
Andrew Bartelt
Dealing with multiple prefixes, namely an article and a proposition.