No. Hebrew is in the Semitic language family, and is related to:
It has many commonalities with Aramaic (the lingua franca throughout Iran, Iraq, Israel, and Lebanon during ancient times, and the language of Jesus), and to a lesser degree, Arabic.
Modern Hebrew, has gone under some European influence but still is considered completely Semitic.
Not at all. It is Semitic like Arabic, specifically Canaanite like Phoenician or Ugaritic (both extinct and historically spoken in the Palestine, Lebanon region.
Hebrew has borrowed some Indo-European words:
According renowned linguist Joseph H. Greenburgh, the Hebrew language is an off shoot of the Afro-Asiatic branch of African languages, to be more specific it is a part of the cannitic or Canaanite sub group of the afro asiatic branch of African languages.
Please do not make the error of thinking of afro asiatic languages as being a mixture of African and Asian peoples today, remember the first humans walked out of Africa and took their languages and cultures with them.
If you simply look at a map of the world you will see that the first place they would have traveled to was the bordering Asian continent specifically along the area we call today the Suez Canal which at that time would have been landlocked leading into south west Asia, today known as the Middle East , these africans were the very first people on the continent we call Asia today. Amongst the various African languages and cultures they established was that of the canaanite and the later Hebrew .
No, Hebrew is not an African language. Hebrew is included in a very large language family called Afro-Asiatic, which includes languages from Africa and Asia.
To be more precise, Hebrew is a West Asian language, related to Arabic, Aramaic, Phoenician, Ugaritic, Akkadian, and Old Canaanite, among others.
Ivreet is the Hebrew word for the language known as Hebrew. It is a Semitic language that is the official language of Israel.
Hebrew is not a religion, it's a language. The Hebrew language is spoken in Israel. Hebrew is considered a holy language by the Jewish people.
The book of Esther is derived from the Hebrew language.
Ivrit (עברית)
Hebrew.
It depends where you buy it. You can buy an English one and change the language on the iPad into Hebrew. To change the language: Settings-->General-->International-->Language-->Hebrew
Israel has Hebrew as its chief language. (Arabic, English and Russian are widespread, but Hebrew is the major language.) See also:More about Israel
Hebrew is famous as the language in which The Bible was originally written.
Reuven Sivan has written: 'Nikhtov male' -- subject(s): Hebrew language, Orthography and spelling, Reform 'The New Bantam-Megiddo Hebrew & English Dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Hebrew language, English, English language, Hebrew 'Be-hithadesh lashon' -- subject(s): Hebrew language, New words, Revival 'The revival of the Hebrew language' -- subject(s): Hebrew language, History
Ellen Feingold has written: 'Handbook of Hebrew verbs' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English language, Hebrew, Hebrew language, Tables, Verb 'Everything you want to know about Hebrew verbs and more--' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English language, Hebrew, Hebrew language, Tables, Verb
No, Korean is not an Indo-European language. It belongs to the Koreanic language family, which is a language isolate with no known genealogical relationship to any other language family.
You combine the sounds of the Hebrew language to form the word. It's the same for any language.