
Learn Hebrew efficiently by practicing speaking and understanding, building hundreds of Hebrew words, and mastering basic grammar, guided by survival skills and a daily structured method.
Learn basic Hebrew for busy people through practical speaking and understanding practice, with five new words per lesson and downloadable slides to memorize them; repeat daily for steady progress.
Master accurate Hebrew pronunciation by using a transliteration approach in which letters and vowels are pronounced as written, avoiding English-based rules and emphasizing native Hebrew sounds.
Repeat key Hebrew words—hello, please, thank you, you are welcome—and practice them to build progress in this beginner course. Download the slides from the resources box to aid practice.
Review and repeat Hebrew and English words, track progress, and reinforce vocabulary as you go through lesson 2.
Repeat the Hebrew words in lesson three and learn that f stands for feminine and m for masculine, using the feminine form for females and the masculine form for males.
Repeat common Hebrew words to practice greetings and expressions. Learn that shalom means peace and serves as hello and goodbye, and review good night, good day, excuse me, sorry.
Repeat Hebrew words and practice pronouns, including I, me, we, you feminine, you masculine, and you feminine plural. Review progress and share your experience.
Repeat the Hebrew word after me, noting masculine plural and feminine forms, and they; review the words and take a short quiz before the next video.
Participate in a timed Hebrew quiz that reviews earlier words, includes a three-second delay before answers, and provides instant feedback to guide improvement by reviewing or repeating words.
learn Hebrew gender grammar, noting that feminine words usually end with a or t, with masculine as the base, and reuse the valet rule to form feminine words, plus practice.
Learn a Hebrew grammar rule for forming feminine from masculine forms, using endings and vowel changes; review new words and examples and note occasional vowel dropping in everyday speech.
Practice repeating Hebrew words and learn masculine and feminine plural forms, including adding the plural suffix, dropping vowels before suffix, and vowel changes in multisyllabic words.
Practice repeating Hebrew words from lesson 10, including help, fast, and well, and learn that yom means day and hayam means today with the prefix ha.
Repeat Hebrew words, noting verbs apply to both feminine and masculine; practice core verbs like go, give, sit, pay, and learn to eat, while reviewing progress.
Repeat the Hebrew word after me as you practice verbs that apply to both feminine and masculine, including to drink, to buy liquor, to learn, and to drive.
Repeat Hebrew words with a focus on the prefixes la and ba and the word for house. Review pronunciation and track progress as you reinforce these words.
Repeat Hebrew words for office, store, restroom, and supermarket in lesson 14, and review your progress as you go over each word.
Review lesson reinforces basic Hebrew phrases, showing how to say things in Hebrew, using prefixes, with examples like good night and to learn, to eat, and home, plus progress updates.
Join the bonus lesson on Hebrew verb conjugation, targeting masculine, feminine, singular, and plural forms, and practice repeating essential words while skipping full grammar.
Explains gendered Hebrew forms, feminine endings (a or t), masculine patterns, pronouns and suffixes, and commands; covers plural suffixes -im and -ot and vowel changes.
In lesson 15, repeat Hebrew words with me, review common terms, and see how much progress you have made as you practice pronunciation.
Lesson 16 invites learners to repeat Hebrew words after me, review matari, matthai, has, isn't, an, and, here come, there are some, and track progress.
Repeat the Hebrew word after me as you review essential words like open, close, money, code, and progress so far, reinforcing pronunciation and recall in lesson 17.
Practice and review common Hebrew vocabulary, including how to say credit card and price questions, with repetition of words learned so far for a comprehensive beginner refresher.
Practice building Hebrew sentences with two quick grammar lessons, learn the prefix ha, which means the, and use masculine and feminine forms to say I can't, no thank you.
This lesson introduces pronoun suffixes and the prefix la, meaning two or four; lee means to or for me, built from the prefix and suffix e, while shell means belongs.
Apply the previous lesson's suffix rules to feminine, masculine, and plural forms, review today's new word, and see progress summarized in a helpful table.
Review suffix rules from previous lessons and apply them to masculine plural forms and pronoun suffixes, using the tables that summarize the last three lessons and show progress.
Repeat the Hebrew vocabulary from lesson 20 after me, including restaurant, food, and salad, and review progress and pronunciation.
Repeat the words after me, go over these words one more time, and track your progress as you review pizza and ice cream.
Review the material learned previously, and note progress by highlighting topics like money, paying, and credit cards.
Practice lesson 24 vocabulary by repeating Hebrew words, including water, juice, meats, coke, cola, coffee, cafe, and related phrases, and review progress so far.
Review and practice essential Hebrew vocabulary: milk, sugar, fruits, vegetables, and chocolate. Repeat pronunciation and usage to reinforce progress.
Practice repeating Hebrew words from lesson 26, focusing on basic vocabulary like apple and cucumber, and review how much progress you have made so far.
Review key Hebrew words from lesson 27, repeat and reinforce vocabulary, and assess your progress so far.
Learn how Hebrew numbers reflect gender, using mainly feminine numbers for ease and lazy speech, while counting people and objects, later study will cover both feminine and masculine forms.
Repeat Hebrew words and numbers to build quick language familiarity. Review pronunciation and track your progress through lesson twenty nine.
Review lesson recaps seven Hebrew words learned so far, demonstrates pronunciation with examples like I love, we, fruits, rice, open, and please, and highlights progress.
Repeat core Hebrew words for room, table, chair, sofa, and closet, then review progress and gauge how far you have advanced.
Repeat the Hebrew words after me and practice the vocabulary aloud, including refrigerator, freezer, and door; review the word once more and track your progress so far.
Practice repeating Hebrew words after me and review each word one more time. Track your progress so far as you go through the lesson.
Repeat the Hebrew words from lesson thirty three, including spoon, teaspoon, capitate, coupet, part seal, seal, barnow book, MacBook, and transcom, to track progress.
Practice conversation comprehension by adjusting video speed for easier understanding, then rewatch at normal speed, with Hebrew translations available in the resources box to track progress.
Practice Hebrew words for body parts, including guf, head, hair, nose, and mouth, and review our progress so far in lesson 34.
Repeat the Hebrew words after me as you practice basic vocabulary for body parts, including leg, finger, ear, nose, and hand, while tracking how far we've progressed.
Practice repeating the Hebrew words after me and review the vocabulary from lesson thirty six. Go over these words one more time and note our progress.
Repeat the Hebrew words from lesson 37 and practice pronunciation, focusing on transportation terms like autobus, train, and plane, while tracking your progress.
Repeat the Hebrew words for come and go in masculine and feminine forms, learn directional words like toward and left, and review how to address men and women.
Repeat the Hebrew words after me, review a biblical Hebrew conjugation uncommon in everyday modern Hebrew, and track progress with left smolar, smolla, and right yamina.
Lesson 40 reinforces Hebrew vocabulary through repeat-after-me practice, reviewing words for above, under, on, and next to, while tracking progress as learners go over these terms again.
Review the bonus-section Hebrew vocabulary and phrases from the lesson, and gauge your progress in Hebrew for busy people beginners.
Practice repeating Hebrew color words such as white, black, gray, blue, and review masculine and feminine forms, singular and plural rules, with a quick grammar refresher and progress update.
Repeat Hebrew words after me to practice pronunciation, and review color terms—green, yellow, red, orange—with words like home and brown as you track your progress.
Repeat the Hebrew words after me as we review vocabulary for lesson forty three, tackle the purple subgoal, and track our progress.
Repeat the Hebrew words after me to practice taste and flavor terms, such as tom and matok, and review all learned since the beginning of the course before next video.
Practice building sentences in Hebrew while applying the rule that adjectives follow nouns, and explore common phrases and translations through examples like asking prices and talking about offices.
Basic Hebrew for Busy People is a Hebrew speaking course designed for people who don't have much time.
Who I am:
My name is Yaakov Young and I am a Hebrew teacher and a serial language student.
Based on both of my experiences, I designed this course to solve the common problems many people have when learning Hebrew, especially the problem of not having enough time.
How does it work:
Close your eyes and imagine how much progress you can make in 300 minutes of studying Hebrew.
I have good news for you! 5 minutes a day x 2 months = 300 minutes!
In this course, the lessons are short and effective, and you will get slides you can download to your smartphone or tablet, to help you review them in a fast and convenient way.
What are you going to learn?
You will learn hundreds of useful Hebrew words as well as very basic grammar rules and tricks.
In addition, you will learn and practice building sentences and understanding Hebrew speakers.
Hebrew pronunciation is very different from English pronunciation, but we will show you how to use the 80/20 rule to dramatically improve your pronunciation.
What students think about the course:
"I feel very comfortable with the format and the pace of this course. I am totally enjoying this learning process"
"Very good!!! Easy to understand and learn"
"A good way to learn a lot of words and grammar fast"
So if you want to learn Hebrew but have had reservations – this course is for you!
I am confident you will enjoy it, but if you change your mind you have a 30-day money-back guarantee to make it easier for you to take the first step of this journey.
So if you wish to learn Hebrew, now is a great time to start.