2.6 Vowels that are letters: discussion
Vowel letters use a consonant plus a nikkud to form a vowel
- Shureq is pronounced like Qibbuts (ruler)
- Hireq Yod is pronounced like the i in machine (compared to Hireq (Short I), which is pronounced like "bitter)
- The other vowel letters are pronounced like the corresponding vowel - Qamets Hei is pronounced like Qamets, and so forth
- All vowel letters, except Seghol Hei, are LONG
- Yod and Vav vowels - י,ו
- Not only are these Long vowels, they have a unique feature is that they are “immune” from “propretonic reduction”
- Therefore they are called “Unchangeable long vowels” or sometimes “Irreducible long vowels”
- We’ll explain what this means in the next lesson
- Hei Vowels - ה
- Hei vowels can ONLY occur at the END of a word
- Hei vowels are extremely common in Hebrew
- The Hei vowels are Long (except for Seghol Hei) but they are not labeled as irreducible/unchangeable32
- Do not confuse “vowel reducing” with “defective spelling”
- Although unchangable long vowels CANNOT reduce, they CAN be written defectively
- For example, what was originally בּוֹ becomes בֹּ
- We will discuss defective spelling next
Strictly speaking, this point is irrelevant as a vowel at the end of a word would never reduce anyway. But, if you are ever asked “are the Hei vowels irreducible/unchangeable?”, the answer is “no.”↩︎