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New Digital Course!
Ready to learn the Hebrew alphabet? Our WhatsApp bot has your back. No need to write when you can just text your way through it!
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At Citizen Café we’re all about getting you talking and trusting your intuition when speaking Hebrew. But hey, we also know that truly feeling comfortable in a new language comes when you’ve got reading and writing down.
We wanted to find a fresh way to teach the Hebrew Alphabet, so we took all the good stuff from learning apps and digital courses and created something totally new: the Hebrew Alphabet WhatsApp course – accessible, playful, and seriously effective.
Anyone who is a beginner in the Hebrew language and wants to learn how to write in Hebrew (Red level students at Citizen Café) – no prior knowledge of Hebrew is required.
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.
!רֶגַע
(reh-gah)
!רֶגַע
(reh-gah)