Learn the Hebraisk Alphabet: Letters, Sounds, and How to Read

Begynder6 min27 tegnMed lyd
Hebrew is written with 22 consonant letters, read right to left, in a square script used continuously for over two thousand years. Like Arabic, it is an abjad: vowels exist as optional diacritical points (niqqud) but are omitted in nearly all everyday adult text. Five letters take different shapes when they appear at the end of a word (ך ם ן ף ץ). Modern Hebrew is the national language of Israel (about 9 million speakers); the same alphabet is used to write Yiddish and Ladino. Beginners who spend daily time can read voweled Hebrew within two weeks, and unvoweled Hebrew fluently within a few months; the alphabet itself is learnable in days, but reading without vowels requires vocabulary exposure.
Base letters
22
Final forms
5
Direction
Right to left
Type
Abjad
På denne side
  1. 1. History and evolution
  2. 2. Where the shapes come from
  3. 3. How Hebrew fits in written Hebraisk
  4. 4. Common pitfalls
  5. 5. How to learn Hebraisk
  6. 6. Frequently asked questions
Aleph through Zayin
The first seven letters in alphabetical order
Chet through Nun
Middle seven letters
Samekh through Tav
Final eight letters in alphabetical order
Final forms
Five letters take a different shape at the end of a word

History and evolution

The Hebrew alphabet has two distinct phases. Paleo-Hebrew (roughly 10th-6th century BCE) was the original script used for inscriptions like the Gezer calendar and the Siloam inscription, and directly descended from the Phoenician abjad. During the Babylonian Exile (6th century BCE), Jewish scribes adopted the Imperial Aramaic script used in Babylon for administrative writing; this square Aramaic script gradually replaced Paleo-Hebrew for religious and literary purposes by the 5th century BCE. The Dead Sea Scrolls (~200 BCE to 70 CE) show the square script in full use. The niqqud vowel-pointing system was developed by the Masoretes of Tiberias in the 7th-10th centuries CE to preserve exact biblical pronunciation during the long period when Hebrew was no longer natively spoken. Spoken Hebrew was revived in the 19th and 20th centuries largely through Eliezer Ben-Yehuda's efforts; modern Israel adopted the square script as its national writing system with independence in 1948.

Where the shapes come from

Hebrew letters descend from the Phoenician abjad; letter names preserve the Phoenician meanings (aleph = ox, bet = house, gimel = camel, dalet = door, he = window). Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, Syriac, Greek, and Latin all descend from the same Phoenician root, which is why the alphabetical orders (aleph-bet-gimel, alpha-beta-gamma, a-b-c) still line up after three thousand years. The square Hebrew shapes we use today are Aramaic, not Phoenician; Paleo-Hebrew letterforms look markedly different and are preserved only in specific liturgical contexts and Samaritan Hebrew.

How Hebrew fits in written Hebraisk

Hebrew is written right to left, but numerals go left to right (as in Arabic). Five letters have final forms used only at the end of a word: kaf (כ → ך), mem (מ → ם), nun (נ → ן), pe (פ → ף), tsadi (צ → ץ). Three letters have two pronunciations distinguished only by a dot (dagesh) inside them: bet (ב = v, בּ = b), kaf (כ = kh, כּ = k), pe (פ = f, פּ = p). In unpointed text, context tells you which pronunciation applies. The niqqud vowel system uses dots and dashes above, below, or inside consonants; it is used for children's books, liturgical texts, poetry, and language instruction, and omitted elsewhere.

Common pitfalls

Unvoweled reading is a separate skill
Adult Hebrew text omits vowels. מלך could be melek (king), molek (reigning), malak (he reigned), malkāh (queen) depending on the intended vowel. You read by recognizing whole words in context, not by decoding letter by letter. Start with voweled texts and wean off as vocabulary grows.
Bet, kaf, and pe have two sounds each
ב is b or v; כ is k or kh; פ is p or f. The dot (dagesh) distinguishes them in pointed text but is usually absent in adult text. The rule is phonotactic: after vowels, these letters soften to the fricative; at the start of a syllable or after a consonant, they stay hard.
Look-alike letters
ב/כ, ד/ר, ה/ח are classic confusion pairs. The reliable tells: ב has a right-angled bottom, כ curves; ד has a shorter top, ר is longer; ה has a gap at the top-left, ח is closed. Drill these pairs early.
Final forms are strictly positional
The five final forms (ך ם ן ף ץ) appear only at the end of a word. Writing a final form mid-word is a clear error. Writing a base form at the end of a word is also an error (never מ at the end, always ם).

How to learn Hebraisk

  1. Learn the 22 base letters in aleph-bet order. This order is used for numerals in Hebrew (aleph=1, bet=2, gimel=3…) and is the foundation of both religious texts and everyday mnemonics.
  2. Add the 5 final forms (ך ם ן ף ץ) once the base forms are comfortable. They differ only in where they appear, so drill them with real words.
  3. Start reading voweled text (niqqud). Children's books, prayer books, and beginner materials use niqqud. Drop the vowels gradually as recognition strengthens.
  4. Drill the look-alike pairs: ב/כ, ד/ר, ה/ח. Recognizing them correctly in running text is where most reading errors come from.
  5. Use spaced repetition for letter recognition (Karpicke & Roediger, 2008). Ten minutes a day for two weeks gets most learners past recognition.
  6. Read Israeli street signs, news headlines on Haaretz or Ynet, and product labels. Real text is how you build the whole-word reading habit needed for unvoweled Hebrew.

Frequently asked questions

Hvor mange bogstaver er der i det hebraiske alfabet?

Det hebraiske alfabet har 22 bogstaver, alle konsonanter. Fem af disse bogstaver (Kaf, Mem, Nun, Pe, Tsade) har en anden form, når de står sidst i et ord, kaldet "sofit" eller slutformer. Vokaler repræsenteres af valgfrie diakritiske tegn kaldet "nikkud", der placeres over eller under konsonanterne, selvom moderne hebraiske tekster normalt udelader dem.

Hvad er rækkefølgen af det hebraiske alfabet?

Det hebraiske alfabet i rækkefølge er: Alef, Bet, Gimel, Dalet, He, Vav, Zayin, Chet, Tet, Yod, Kaf, Lamed, Mem, Nun, Samekh, Ayin, Pe, Tsade, Qof, Resh, Shin, Tav. Denne rækkefølge er ældgammel og konsistent på tværs af alle hebraiske tekster. At lære rækkefølgen hjælper med ordbogs-opslag og forståelse af hebraiske tal, da hvert bogstav også repræsenterer et tal.

Findes der en sang til at lære det hebraiske alfabet?

Ja, den mest populære hebraiske alfabetsang sætter alle 22 bogstaver til en simpel, gentagen melodi, der ligner den engelske ABC-sang. Søgning på "Alef Bet Song" på YouTube giver snesevis af versioner til børn og voksne. At synge bogstaverne i rækkefølge opbygger muskelhukommelse hurtigt, og de fleste kan huske hele sekvensen efter få dages øvelse.

Hvordan udtaler man det hebraiske alfabet?

De fleste hebraiske bogstaver svarer til kendte engelske lyde. Bet er "b", Gimel er "g", Dalet er "d". De sværeste konsonanter for engelsktalende er Chet (en guttural "kh"), Ayin (et dybt gutturalt stop) og Resh (et blødt, let rullet "r"). Shin kan være "sh" eller "s" afhængigt af punktets placering. At øve disse få ukendte lyde først fremskynder den samlede udtale.

Hvordan lærer man det hebraiske alfabet?

Start med at gruppere de 22 bogstaver i sæt på fem eller seks og øv dig i at skrive hvert sæt dagligt. Brug flashcards med bogstavet på den ene side og dets navn og lyd på den anden. Apps som Memrise eller Drops styrker genkendelse gennem spaced repetition. De fleste kan identificere alle bogstaver inden for to til tre uger med daglige 15-minutters sessioner.

Hvordan lærer man at læse hebraisk?

Lær først de 22 konsonanter udenad, derefter nikkud (vokaltegn), der forekommer i begyndertekster og bønnebøger. Øv dig i at læse punkteret (vokaliseret) hebraisk, indtil bogstavgenkendelse bliver automatisk. Gå derefter over til upunkteret moderne hebraisk og brug kontekst til at udfylde manglende vokaler. Børnebøger og nyhedssider som Bereshit tilbyder gradueret læsemateriale til denne progression.

Hvad er den bedste guide til det hebraiske alfabet for begyndere?

Den bedste begynderguide grupperer bogstaver efter visuel lighed, parrer hvert bogstav med dets lyd og et eksempelord og inkluderer strækrækkefølge til skriveøvelser. "Aleph Isn't Tough" af Linda Motzkin er en populær arbejdsbog. Online dækker HebrewPod101's alfabetserie alle 22 bogstaver med lyd og printbare arbejdsark, hvilket gør den til et stærkt gratis udgangspunkt.

Hvor lang tid tager det at lære det hebraiske alfabet?

De fleste kan genkende alle 22 hebraiske bogstaver inden for to til tre uger med daglig 15-minutters øvelse. At læse flydende med vokaltegn (nikkud) tager typisk yderligere to til fire uger. At opnå komfortabel læsehastighed i upunkteret moderne hebraisk, hvor vokaler udledes fra kontekst, kræver normalt to til tre måneders regelmæssig læseøvelse.

Andre skriftsystemer

Gennemgået af eevi-teamet ·
Start gratis med Hebraisk