The Top Language Hebrew Community site is specifically designed for Hebrew speakers living in London, UK, and Ireland.
We offer a definitive range of Hebrew language services including access to Europe's leading Hebrew Jobs site, Hebrew Dating Services, and access to the Hebrew Flat Share and Renting section.
Users can also access classifieds and a comprehensive Hebrew Business Directory. Our online community also includes Hebrew Events and Hebrew Forums to unite Hebrew language speakers in this increasingly multicultural part of the World.
Whether you're renting or looking for a Hebrew flatmate why not try our Hebrew Flat Share portal
Find love! Meet people who speak Hebrew! Join Top Language Dating for free now!
Post a Hebrew event, view an event where you can use your Hebrew skills - visit our Events section
Post messages, and make Hebrew friends! Plus much more - go to Language Forum now
Looking for that dream Hebrew job? visit Top language Jobs- Europe's No:1 Language Job Board.
Sell unwanted items, search for bargains. Visit our Hebrew Classifieds section today
Find any Hebrew business you’re looking for at a click of a button - try our Language Directory
Join now to get all the great benefits of the Top Language Community site - It's free!. Login / Register
Hebrew is a Semitic language of the Afro-Asiatic language family spoken by more than seven million people in Israel and Jewish communities around the world. In Israel, it is one of the two official languages (together with Arabic), and spoken by an overwhelming majority of the population.
The core of the Hebrew Bible (also known as the Tanakh) is the first five books of the Torah, which Judaism and Christianity traditionally hold to have been recorded in the time of Moses 13th century BCE. It is written in Classical Hebrew, and much of its present form is specifically in the dialect of Biblical Hebrew that scholars believe flourished roughly around the 6th century BCE, near the Babylonian Exile. In light of the Torah, Jews have called Hebrew לשון הקודש the "language of Holiness" (Lĕshôn Ha-Kôdesh) since ancient times.
Most linguists agree that after the 6th century BCE when the Neo-Babylonian Empire destroyed Jerusalem and exiled its population to Babylon and the Persian Empire allowed them to return, the Biblical Hebrew dialect prevalent in the Bible came to be replaced in daily use by new dialects of Hebrew and a local version of Aramaic.
After the 2nd century CE when the Roman Empire exiled the Jewish population of Jerusalem and parts of Roman occupied Judea, Hebrew gradually ceased to be a spoken language roughly around 300 CE, but remained a major literary language during the centuries since. Not only was it used for religion, but for a large variety of purposes. Letters, contracts, commerce, science, philosophy, medicine, poetry, justice codes, all resorted to Hebrew, which thus adapted to various new fields and terminologies by borrowings and inventions.
Hebrew was revitalized during the late 19th and early 20th century as the spoken language of Israel, called New Hebrew and also called Israeli Hebrew or Modern Hebrew. Eventually it replaced a score of languages spoken by Jews at that time, such as Arabic, Ladino (also called Judezmo), Yiddish, Russian, and other languages of the Jewish diaspora.
Because of its large disuse for centuries, Hebrew lacked many modern words. Several were adapted as neologisms from the Hebrew Bible or borrowed from other languages by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda. Largely because of this, modern Hebrew became an official language in British-ruled Palestine in 1921, and the primary official language of the State of Israel, (Arabic and English maintained their official language status).
© 2010 Top Language Community. All rights reserved.
This site is operated from England under English Law
For further information see our terms of use, privacy and refund policies.
Totally Communications Web Designers