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  1. May 11, 2023 · The Jewish people were once known as Hebrews for their language, which flourished from roughly the 13th to second centuries B.C.—when the Hebrew Bible, also known as the Old Testament, was...

    • Allie Yang
  2. Historical records testify to the existence of Hebrew from the 10th century BCE [8] to the late Second Temple period (lasting to 70 CE), after which the language developed into Mishnaic Hebrew. From about the 6th century BCE until the Middle Ages, many Jews spoke Aramaic, a related Semitic language.

  3. Hebrew has evolved over time. In Modern Hebrew (Ivrit), lo is “no” and ken is “yes.” In Mishnaic Hebrew (which was current around 2,000 years ago), the word for “yes” was hen. And going back to Biblical Hebrew, it does not appear that there was any word at all for “yes.”

  4. A Brief History of Hebrew. Hebrew was the language spoken in biblical times by the ancient Israelites. One of the original names for this language, and the one it is called today, is ivrit, because it is the language spoken by a people called the ivrim, or the Hebrew people.

  5. Apr 15, 2019 · This took us right up to the mid 19th century, when some bright-eyed young people decided Jews should move back to Palestine and start speaking Hebrew. Hebrew’s revival. It’s fairly well-known in the history of Hebrew that the language was revised and modernised for the state of Israel. But the way it happened is not well known.

  6. The prehistory of the Hebrews took place in the Aramaic sphere, and the impact of that tongue on the first "Jewish" language, Hebrew, was so strong that it has been called a fusion of Canaanite and Aramaic. The lifespan of Hebrew covers roughly the period of the political independence of those speaking it.

  7. Oct 23, 2019 · In other words, Jews were able to speak Hebrew and did so when the need arose (Ornan 1984). Rather it was a conscious effort to change the status of a language from one used in narrowly explicit settings to one that would be used by everyday people in unremarkable circumstances.

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