Yesterday I was thinking that you will post next Shabbath, not this one.
Nice choice for the example with David. It has a lot of symbolism behind the name for the hebrews and the language.
By bringing the pronounciation to it we can see that the hebrew language is spoken a lot out of the troath. You bring a lot of meaning, also by doing this on Shabbath, when most of rabbies would say that non-Torah studies are forbbiden, but as you said in some previous post, you do this to be able to study the Old Testament, which has a lot in common with Torah ;)
I will bring pronunciation into it, but also I need to show the wave structure of reading - it is not simply left to right.
I am catching up in the hat an missed a Shabbat here or there. I hopt to bring it all together.
nice reply @hebrew, I still do not quite understand the writing, is it similar to the usual letters.
I think you do a tremendous job, hebrew is also very hard to pronounce as the whole sound building is different than English or Spanish (as I remember this are the languages you speak). The sounds coming out of the throat have a bigger influence.
Thank you very much @hebrew
Thanks