Hebrew Practice Groups

Develop your Hebrew-speaking muscles by practicing the latests vocabulary & grammar you’ve learned!

Join The Gym

Sign up for a FREE 1:1 with a teacher to know your Hebrew level.

Practice speaking and fluency in Hebrew.

Like all muscles in your body, you need exercise to grow and improve. That’s why our method is all about talking! In our classes, you will not be asked to write but to listen and repeat. Three hours a week is not enough time to practice, and you don’t always have someone to rehearse with at home (or feel comfortable with).

Practice speaking and fluency in Hebrew.

This is why we created the Practice Groups

Our classes are led by our team of incredible teachers. They will help you practice the material taught in class, in an intense pace that will get you on the running track. The Hebrew Gym is available to our students at no additional cost and without limitations.

Remember – Practice Makes Progress!
The more practices you join, the more you will learn.
And it is important to us that you feel comfortable with your Hebrew.

FAQ

We offer up to 9 slots a week, and you can join as many as you want!

No limitations. Just come and work out!

The Hebrew Gym workouts are not with your organic class group, so you get to meet new people from around the world every week. We repeat things from the current semester and some material from the past.
Only active citizen students or past students that have been registered.

You can contact our Community, and they will give you a price offer for monthly use!

Join us!

Sign up for a FREE 1:1 with a teacher to know your Hebrew level and START SPEAKING HEBREW!

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Hebrew Nugget:

Hebrew practice groups

The past year has been an emotional rollercoaster – moving from the shock, pain, and sadness of unimaginable events to the moments of hope we felt with each hostage coming home, each family reunited, and every soldier returning safely. Alongside this, we’ve found countless reasons to be grateful – for the incredible outpouring of support from civilians, and for the things we still hold dear, like our families, our partners, and our community. But these feelings are always mixed with the ache and despair that everyone in Israel still carries, even now.
I’d say the best way to describe how everyone around me is feeling is רגשות מעורבים (reh-gah-shoht meh-oh-rah-veem), which means “mixed emotions.” רגש (reh-gehsh) means “an emotion” in singular, but in plural, רגשות, it might sound feminine with the “OHT” ending. But here’s the catch: this doesn’t change the gender of the noun or the adjective that follows, which still matches the singular form. So, it’s מעורבים and not מעורבות. It’s just one of those quirks of Hebrew that’s tricky to explain.

One moment!

!רֶגַע

(reh-gah)

Not sure yet?

Leave your contact, and we’ll call you back.

One moment!

!רֶגַע

(reh-gah)

Not sure yet?

Leave your contact, and we’ll call you back.