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Page "Yemenite Hebrew" ¶ 30
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Some Related Sentences

ani and Yemenite
Yemenite pronunciation is not uniform, and Morag has distinguished five sub-dialects, of which the best known is probably Sana ' ani, originally spoken by Jews in and around Sana ' a.
It should be noted that these sounds are only identical in a minority of Yemenite Jews ( e. g. the Sharabi Yemenite Jews ), as opposed to that of the Sana ' ani pronunciation which most Yemenite Jews use.
* Margalit Tzan ' ani ( Yemenite Jew )

ani and Hebrew
* Sana ' ani Hebrew primarily places stress on the penultimate syllable, as in Ashkenazi Hebrew.
" Brian J. Capper writes that this is a Latin derivation from the Hebrew beth ' ani or more likely the Aramaic beth ' anya, both of which mean " house of the poor " or " house of affliction / poverty ," also semantically speaking " poor-house.
The title of the song is the Hebrew word " ani " ( first person singular pronoun ) expressed in the popular children's code " Bet language ".
Some suggest the name comes from Hebrew " cana ' ani " word meant merchant, for which, as Phoenicians, the Canaanites became justly famous.

Yemenite and Hebrew
The same claim is sometimes made for Yemenite Hebrew or Temanit, which differs from other Mizrahi dialects by having a radically different vowel system, and distinguishing between different diacritically marked consonants that are pronounced identically in other dialects ( for example gimel and " ghimel ".
** Yemenite Hebrew pronunciation ( Temani Hebrew ) used by Jews of Yemen
Most modern Sifrei Torah are written with forty-two lines of text per column ( Yemenite Jews use fifty ), and very strict rules about the position and appearance of the Hebrew letters are observed.
Ofra Haza ( Hebrew: עפרה חזה, Arabic: ; born Bat-Sheva Ofrah Hazah ; 19 November 195723 February 2000 ) was an Israeli singer of Yemenite Jewish origin, an actress and international recording artist.
Rarely it could also be transliterated as Ethrog or Ethrogh even in scholarly work, which is according to the Yemenite Hebrew.
* Yemenite Hebrew, dialect of the Hebrew language.
Its closest living descendant is the Temani ( Yemenite Hebrew ).
Daklon's music draws on centuries of Hebrew poetry and musical traditions of the Yemenite Jews.
In Talmudic times, and to this day in Yemenite Jewish communities, Targum Onkelos was recited by heart as a verse-by-verse translation alternately with the Hebrew verses of the Torah in the synagogue.
In Talmudic times ( and to this day in Yemenite Jewish communities ) Targum Jonathan was read as a verse-by-verse translation alternatively with the Hebrew verses of the haftarah in the synagogue.
Examples of his contributions include his encyclopedic commentary to the entire Mishneh Torah set to the renowned Yemenite text of the Mishneh Torah, his translation of all of Maimonides ' Commentary on the Mishnah from Arabic into modern Hebrew, as well as translations of the Guide for the Perplexed, Duties of the Heart, Sefer Kuzari, and a number of other works.
** Yemenite HebrewYemenite Jews, liturgical
* Yemenite Hebrew language ( liturgical )
* Various oral traditions, especially the oral tradition of Yemenite Hebrew pronunciation, and the Karaite tradition.
This last difference is the standard shibboleth for distinguishing Sephardi from Ashkenazi ( and Yemenite ) Hebrew.
* Yemenite Hebrew
Yemenite Hebrew (), (), also referred to as Temani Hebrew, is the pronunciation system for Biblical and liturgical Hebrew traditionally used by Yemenite Jews.

Pronunciation and Hebrew
* Hebrew Pronunciation, Rabbi Gil Student about how Hebrew should be pronounced in prayer, in accordance with Halakha and Poskim
* 1804 three tracts on The Syntax and Pronunciation of the Hebrew Tongue

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