Shalom, we are Doron & Elsa ! Welcome to Piece of Hebrew, an immersive Hebrew learning experience! Learn Hebrew with a Hebrew native speaker as it is actually spoken by real Israelis. Gain vocabulary and master new idoms in their context, while improving your Hebrew comprehension and pronunciation skills. Piece of Hebrew videos are more targeted at intermediate Hebrew students.
In Tel Aviv me and another guy from our travel group spoke with a nice older Jewish lady who asked us if we were married or had kids, when we said no she said "why not?" and told us to go find nice young women to marry. She was really sweet and even knew that neither of us were Jews. She just wanted Hashem's creation to multiply, and it was apparent she wanted good for us.
GOD, LET THERE BE PEACE AND TRANQUILITY IN BOTH COUNTRIES,LET THEM UNDERSTAND EACH OTHER AND LIVE TOGATHER ALSO LET THE SOULS OF THE DEAD REST IN PEACE ALLOHU AKBAR 🤲🤲🤲🤲🌙⭐😔😔
Sometimes I wish that modern Hebrew were imposed on different disciplines (e.g., natural sciences or international law) in order that it -- instead of, say, Modern Standard Arabic (or English or French or Mandarin) -- were made to be more familiar to various populations' ears (and, therefore, were made to seem less foreign to many of humanty's cultures). Listening to this video revives that wish.
I like learning languages from comedy series like "HaYehudim Ba'im", then you also learn some history in a fun way - albeit reinterpreted for some modern concern. The sketeches use modern language and phrases so once a particular scene is stuck you can easily recall them.
I like how many children are in Israel. Regarding to Malka words - women need to bring 3 children for population to reproduce. So it looks like a wrong theory if we want "to multiply". Anyway, "Over the coming decades, global fertility is predicted to decline even further, reaching a fertility rate of around 1.8 in 2050, and 1.6 in 2100-well below the replacement level. By 2100, only six of 204 countries and territories (Samoa, Somalia, Tonga, Niger, Chad, and Tajikistan) are expected to have fertility rates exceeding 2.1 births per female. The TFR in Western Europe is predicted to be 1.44 in 2050, dropping to 1.37 in 2100, with Israel, Iceland, Denmark, France, and Germany expected to have the highest fertility rates at between 2.09 and 1.40 at the end of the century." - Lancet