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Court rules Machpelah house lawfully purchased
Itamar Fleishman
Published: 01.07.13, 15:13
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14 Talkbacks for this article
1. Hallelujah!
Sarah B ,   U.S.A. / Israel   (07.01.13)
2. Punishment before condamnation?
ORA ,   JERUSALEM   (07.01.13)
3. Justice delayed is justice denied!
Cowboy Joe ,   Calgary, Canada   (07.01.13)
4. GOOD KEEP BUILDING!!!!
BUILD BABY BUILD!!!! ,   United States   (07.01.13)
All the land belongs to Israel.
5. #1 Sarah B.
DavidR ,   USA   (07.01.13)
If you are really Sarah B., which I doubt, you would know there is no "j" in Halleluyah. So , I think you are another fake Sarah B.
6. To: No. 5
Sarah B ,   U.S.A. / Israel   (07.01.13)
It is me, and I assure you that I spelled "hallelujah" correctly. You, on the other hand, did not.
7. Sarah B.
DavidR ,   USA   (07.01.13)
There has never been a "J" in the Hebrew language. The word is a Hebrew word. The letter "J" is an English letter that came about in the days of King James. Sorry Sarah but you are not always right. Just always proud and boastful.
8. Arabs have no rights under jewish justice
World   (07.01.13)
9. DavidR @7, I beleive there is no letter in English language
leo ,   usa   (07.01.13)
to imitate proper Hebrew sound and as a result there are variations 'ja' and 'ya', which usually depend on your preference and origin. For example Slavic speaking Jews would prefer 'ya' over 'ja' and so on.
10. DavidR @5, regardless, still Halleluyah!
leo ,   usa   (07.01.13)
11. "World" @8, what can I say, leave and be happy.
leo ,   usa   (07.01.13)
12. To: No. 8
Sarah B ,   U.S.A. / Israel   (07.02.13)
Well, let's see now -- did the Arabs not lose six wars which they started? What rights do they deserve? To the victor belongs the spoil. That's been the policy for millennia untold. Deal with it.
13. To: No. 7
Sarah B ,   U.S.A. / Israel   (07.02.13)
The letter "j" is pronounced as a letter "y." But it is spelled with a "j." You can continue to grasp at straws if you wish .... but you are wrong. I am correct. Not proud; not boastful -- just correct. Suck it up. Have a retort, do you? Go ahead! Make an even bigger fool of yourself. See if I care.
14. #9 Leo
DavidR ,   USA   (07.02.13)
I agree with the sounds, however, the Yod in Hebrew is generally pronounced with a Y or I sound. My Torah/Tanach uses the Y. I believe that to be the correct usage because like it mentioned before the "J" didn't come into usage until the era of King James English. I was not trying to insult Sarah, I thought I was defending her, however, she has her opinion and I have mine. REGARDLESS, as you say Leo: HALLELUYAH!!!
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