📖 Elevate your Hebrew game with every card!
The Hebrew Biblical Alphabet Flash Cards set includes 48 durable cards designed for mastering the Biblical Hebrew language. Each card features the letter, name, stroke order, pronunciation, and transliteration, making it an ideal educational resource for learners of all ages. With a water-resistant coating and a QR code for online resources, these cards are perfect for both classroom and home use.
G**Y
Best product for learning Hebrew alphabet
Excellent product. Made learning the alphabet much easier than other products I tried.
A**P
Playing card sized flash cards. Love them, they’ve progressed my alief-biet learning significantly.
Great fashion cards. Pocket/ Playing card sized, but definitely flash cards. Very convenient and easy to carry.
N**H
Excellent cards to learn the Hebrew alphabet
These cards a great quality and very helpful in learning the alphabet. I highly recommend them. I have searched and these are the best ones I've found.
C**E
Perfect for learning
Really helpful and highly recommend
J**D
Confusing
Hebrew is hard to learn. These flash cards made it more confusing.Not what I expected.Maybe I am too dumb to learn?
M**S
We have to know The Hebrew Language!
I'm learning, just can't get the words yet.
J**.
Great for consonants, wrong for vowels
These are very well-made cards about the size of a deck of playing cards. I'm giving them 3 stars because the vowels are not accurate - often they are downright wrong. If this deck were only consonants (or if the vowels were correct), I would rate it 5 stars. I'm approaching the vowel pronunciation from a North American Jewish perspective (Ashkenazi but using Sephardic pronunciation in shul; I'm also taking a Hebrew class with Sephardic pronunciation).Examples of problems with the vowel cards: the cholam and cholam malay are both listed as "long o" but according to the cards, the pronunciations are different: the cholam "as in 'o' in 'note'" and the cholam malay "as in 'oo' in 'book'." That's wrong; these vowels are both pronounced with a long o (as in "oh my!"). Meanwhile, the kamatz card also says it's pronounced "as in 'o' in 'note'" (same description as the cholam) but a kamatz is pronounced as "ah," like the "a" in "father." According to the cards, the tsere and the segol are both pronounced "as in 'e' in 'pet'" but only the segol is pronounced like "eh" in "pet"; the tsere is pronounced like the "ey" in "they."It's a shame that the vowels are wrong because the remainder of the cards are great. I wound up correcting the incorrect vowel cards because I like the deck so much. It also comes with a handy consonant-only chart that folds to the size of a card.
D**Y
Excellent
Great seller. Quick shipping
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 weeks ago