501 Hebrew Verbs (Barron's 501 Verbs)
501 Hebrew Verbs (Barron's 501 Verbs) book cover

501 Hebrew Verbs (Barron's 501 Verbs)

Third Edition

Price
$20.40
Format
Paperback
Pages
880
Publisher
Barrons Educational Services
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1438010403
Dimensions
6 x 1.6 x 9 inches
Weight
1.82 pounds

Description

"Bolozky maintains the same format he used in the first two editions, but he drew from a new verb frequency list compiled from a 165-million word corpus of Hebrew blogs, so his selection of words to include here better reflect a middle register of everyday Hebrew language use today. Another change is that though the fully conjugated 1,532 most frequent verb forms are assigned to their respective root groups, in this edition, the internal ordering within each root group is also based on frequency." — Protoview, protoview.com Shmuel Bolozky earned a B.A. in English Literature and Middle Eastern Studies at Hebrew University of Jerusalem and an M.A. in English Language, University of London. He went on to earn a Ph.D. in Linguistics, Department of Linguistics, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois. A linguist by training, Professor Bolozky specializes in Hebrew phonology (sound systems of languages) and morphology (word formation). His work centers on natural phonetically motivated processes and on word-formation patterns and productivity. He believes that linguistics is a powerful tool in language instruction. He is Associate editor of Brill’s Encyclopedia of Hebrew Language and Linguistics and is a member of the editorial board of Hebrew Studies, Shofar, and Journal of Higher Hebrew Education. He served as President of the National Association of Professors of Hebrew (NAPH), and currently is the Associate Director for Hebrew at the National Middle East Language Resource Center.

Features & Highlights

  • Learning Hebrew becomes easier with Barron’s
  • 501 Hebrew Verbs
  • . Each verb is listed alphabetically in easy-to-follow chart form—one verb per page with its English translation. The author presents the most commonly used Hebrew verbs in all forms, and includes example sentences and common idioms to demonstrate verb usage and how verbs function within the sentence.
  • This comprehensive guide to Hebrew verb usage is ideal for students, travelers, and adult learners. It includes:
  • The 1531 most common Hebrew verbs, fully conjugated, grouped into 759 roots based on verb frequency
  • The 1531 most common Hebrew verbs, fully conjugated, grouped into 759 roots based on verb frequency
  • The Hebrew roots and derived infinitives printed at the top of each page
  • The Hebrew roots and derived infinitives printed at the top of each page
  • Less frequent verb forms realized in the relevant roots listed separately (citation forms only)
  • Less frequent verb forms realized in the relevant roots listed separately (citation forms only)
  • Present participles, verbal nouns and infinitives (construct and absolute forms)
  • Present participles, verbal nouns and infinitives (construct and absolute forms)
  • Jussive forms of verbs that are significantly different from non-jussive ones
  • Jussive forms of verbs that are significantly different from non-jussive ones
  • Example sentences for each verb-root group, with accompanying translations, followed by special expressions incorporating the relevant verbs
  • Example sentences for each verb-root group, with accompanying translations, followed by special expressions incorporating the relevant verbs
  • Notes on usage register (such as literary, colloquial, and slang) as well as on colloquial alternates of normative forms
  • Notes on usage register (such as literary, colloquial, and slang) as well as on colloquial alternates of normative forms
  • An explanatory essay discussing Hebrew verb formation and usage
  • An explanatory essay discussing Hebrew verb formation and usage
  • Root index, Hebrew-English Index, and English-Hebrew index, in alphabetical order
  • Root index, Hebrew-English Index, and English-Hebrew index, in alphabetical order

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(142)
★★★★
25%
(59)
★★★
15%
(36)
★★
7%
(17)
-7%
(-17)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Great Guide to have--Can't do without it!!!!

In few words--GET IT--or you will regret if you don't.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great buy!

Excellent compilation of Hebrew verbs with good explanations and many examples within sentences. Can’t wait to use this during my ulpan in Tel Aviv this coming June.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Terrible. Waste of money.

The font is very small. Hard to read. My brain hurt.
No transliteration. It doesn't show to pronounce words.
I know Hebrew alphabet but i do not know how to read words, this book is not helpful at all.
3 people found this helpful
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Surface Level Review

I am by no means fluent in Modern Hebrew or Biblical, though I read moderately well if a bit slowly, when vowel markings are present. I had been puzzling over and researching a word in a daily Hebrew prayer for about four years (Chabad has the correct meaning, but written support was sought) and finally took a few minutes to search in this text for what I guessed was the root of the verb. I found it immediately, and the definition used in the daily prayer was well supported. I also found the word in two places in the three indexes at the rear of the text. The preface looks a bit daunting, but should be useful when read at a careful pace.
2 people found this helpful
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The worst hebrew language book ever written

If you want to improve your Hebrew, this is not your book. What little explanation there is in the book is written more like a Ph. D thesis from a Ph D student who never learned how to write. It talks about nuances between modern hebrew, early and late biblical hebrew, mishanic hebrew, etc that have little relevance. He goes on and on and on about inchoative/resultative and reciprocal/mutual and "ergative" without relating this to any examples or providing any context for those of us who are not boring language historians.

The meat of the book, the conjugations themselves, leave a lot to be desired. It is a list of words with their most frequent conjugations but most of it has no translation. So yes, you might learn various conjugations of a particular shoresh, but you won't understand how it's meaning changes from one binyan to the next or as a noun or any other multitude of forms.

At least the book was cheap. My biggest regret is having to lug this garbage to the trash.
2 people found this helpful
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Very useful but missing some key verbs

Great info and organization. But some of the first few verbs I went to look up were consider (shokel), suggest (matsiaa) and miss (mefasfes), all of which seem like very common language and are not in the book.
1 people found this helpful
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Extremely useful book!

I suppose this version in each language is valuable, but in Hebrew this book is indispensable!
1 people found this helpful
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Useful

Hebrew verbs are difficult and this is a useful reference to them. The organization is a little difficult since the book is organized by the roots so if you don't know the root you need to use the index, which is not always accurate. But this seems to be the best book out there on this subject.
1 people found this helpful
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Useful, but not quite as good as Hans Wehr's Arabic text

I was looking for an easy reference guide to Hebrew roots. I think this is as good a reference as exists, but I don't love the layout of the verbs under each root-- it's not my beloved Hans Wehr Arabic text, but it's good enough.
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Fantastic

There is a lot to learn in this book