Christforums
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I've been studying Paleo Hebraic now for a little over a year along w/ Sephardic Hebrew. At the point now when translating modern Hebrew into ancient Hebraic allows to understand the meaning because each letter is pictographic combined w/ other words begins to form a story and in its completed word the word has the meaning of the story. Over time the "meaning" was lost for phonetics or how each letter "sounds". Paleo Hebrew is Phoenician and/or the core language for the Canaanite alphabet.
In English we are taught the meaning of each word rather than being able to determine the definition of each word by every letter that forms the completed word. What we are taught is then committed to memory. I'm finally at the point when translating from modern Hebrew to Ancient Hebraic that the result is the resulting meaning to help comprehension. I never expected this to happen! This has been quite a fascinating journey and archaeology adds to the excitement whenever an ancient ruin is discovered and some passage from future Scriptural language exists!
These original forms are the language found in caves on walls, animal skins, clay vessels, stones, etc. Now, I'm trying to figure out how to load this into a keyboard and map it out so I can write it digitally.



Genesis in the original Paleo form, the precursor for sematic languages such as Aramaic, Arabic, and Hebrew.

Anybody else look into or study Paleo Hebrew?
isaiah.school
In English we are taught the meaning of each word rather than being able to determine the definition of each word by every letter that forms the completed word. What we are taught is then committed to memory. I'm finally at the point when translating from modern Hebrew to Ancient Hebraic that the result is the resulting meaning to help comprehension. I never expected this to happen! This has been quite a fascinating journey and archaeology adds to the excitement whenever an ancient ruin is discovered and some passage from future Scriptural language exists!
These original forms are the language found in caves on walls, animal skins, clay vessels, stones, etc. Now, I'm trying to figure out how to load this into a keyboard and map it out so I can write it digitally.



Genesis in the original Paleo form, the precursor for sematic languages such as Aramaic, Arabic, and Hebrew.

Anybody else look into or study Paleo Hebrew?
Paleo Hebraic - Isaiah School
Paleo Hebraic I've been studying Paleo Hebraic now for a little over a year along w/ Sephardic Hebrew. I'm at the point now when translating modern Hebrew into ancient Hebraic, a surprise turn of events has surfaced in that translating from modern Hebrew to ancient Hebraic allows understanding...
isaiah.school
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