Combined Hebrew Vowels

This series of web pages provides free lessons on the Hebrew Vowels. Previous lessons looked at the Hebrew Alphabet. If you want to learn Hebrew quickly, why not download our Hebrew Vowel Flashcards and get started within minutes?


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You have now met all the vowels in the Hebrew language. The same vowels are used in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) as well as Modern Hebrew.

We looked at Shva in the previous lesson. On occasions, Shva can occur under one of the four ‘gutturals’ of the Hebrew language (Hebrew letter , Hebrew letter he, Hebrew letter chet and Hebrew letter ayin). When this happens, the Shva makes it very difficult to pronounce because a guttural is not easy to articulate so close to another letter (as would normally happen with Shva). To make the word easier to pronounce, a Shva under one of these Hebrew letters always occurs with one of the vowels Patah, Segol or Kamets. The Shva occurs along with the usual vowel, and is pronounced with a short half-vowel.

As an example, here is the Hebrew letter Hebrew letter alef with each of the combined Hebrew vowel points in turn:
 

Hebrew letter alef with segol  Shva and Segol together

Hebrew letter alef with patah  Shva and Patah together

Hebrew letter alef with kamets  Shva and Kamets together

These combined vowels often occur at the start of a word. Here are a few common examples from the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible):

Hebrew word elohim  God, Elohim (2606)
Hebrew word asher       that, which (4838)
Hebrew word ani          I (13)
Hebrew word Adonai      God, Adonai, Lord (335)

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