Hebrew is a Northwest Semitic language revived as a modern spoken tongue in the 20th century after millennia as a liturgical literary language. Israel’s standard is one of history’s most successful language revitalization projects.

Hebrew
Hebrew · hebrew · Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel · 31.7683, 35.2137 · Israel

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 Speakers9 M
L1 Native Speakers5 M
Number of Countries1 countries
Language Vitality Index8 scale
Web Domain Share (%)0.1 %
Language FamilyAfro-Asiatic / Semitic / Northwest Semitic
Standard ScriptHebrew abjad
Grammatical TypologySVO, Fusional, Root-and-pattern
UNESCO Risk CategorySafe
Clear