Historical Evolution
Biblical Hebrew gave way to Mishnaic and Medieval literary forms; by the early modern period Hebrew was primarily sacred and scholarly. Eliezer Ben-Yehuda and the Zionist project engineered spoken revival, coining neologisms and establishing schools. Modern Israeli Hebrew absorbed influences from Yiddish, Arabic, and European languages.
Phonology
Modern Hebrew has five vowels; consonants include pharyngeal /ʕ/ and uvular /χ/ though these weaken in casual speech. Stress is typically penultimate or final. The alphabet is abjad: vowels marked optionally by niqqud in religious texts, rarely in everyday writing.
Syntax
Hebrew is primarily SVO in modern usage with prepositions. Verbs use root-and-pattern morphology with binyanim (verb stems) encoding voice and aktionsart. Gender and number agreement on verbs and adjectives is mandatory; definite article ha- is proclitic.
Attributes
| Total Speakers | 9 M |
|---|---|
| L1 Native Speakers | 5 M |
| Number of Countries | 1 countries |
| Language Vitality Index | 8 scale |
| Web Domain Share (%) | 0.1 % |
| Language Family | Afro-Asiatic / Semitic / Northwest Semitic |
| Standard Script | Hebrew abjad |
| Grammatical Typology | SVO, Fusional, Root-and-pattern |
| UNESCO Risk Category | Safe |