Modern Hebrew is not Manakahthey, the original biblical language. I find it confusing to learn IBaRey using Babylonian scripts with added Chaldean vowel marks. It is a false claim because Hebrew is founded in sign language, not roots symbols. They pushed Hebrew roots for the foundation of Hebrew words.
The Restored Hebrew Tongue, also utilizes the Babylonian scripts to prove their restored tongue. The vowels marks in Modern Hebrew came from the Chaldeans. Modern Hebrew also uses confusing vowel marks that do not exist in Manakahthey. See KahyTs & uu symbols for more information and find out how you can know correct sounds of these letters.Īs you see, Modern Hebrew has it’s origin in Egyptian Hieroglyphics. EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHICSĪs you see, the Modern Hebrew sounds of the Chet & Vav letter comes from the Egyptian Hieroglyphics. There are 6 letters that can have a dot (dagesh) in them, yielding a. I can’t say that about Aramaic or the Samaritan language. Answer (1 of 7): All the answers Ive read here so far are in error to one degree or another. Wow! Aramaic might be closer in relationship to Manakahthey or the Samaritans than Modern Hebrew, however, the bible did preserve the meaning of most words and it held it “back in time”. Modern Hebrew can’t be Manakahthey because it has over 29 letters and vowel marks that didn’t exist in ancient Manakahthey. See my other post on Manakahthey in History to see other discoveries and fonts based on inscriptions of various sorts.
In my opinion, this font represents the hand gestures in Manakahthey the best. I find the “neatest & most legible” to be the “Moabite Stone Inscriptions”. There are many fonts and variations of the Manakahthey symbols. Let’s compare the letters & sounds of Manakahthey, Modern Hebrew & Egyptian Hieroglyphics. Most of the words, whose origin is from Manakahthey and not from a foreign language, can be communicated using sign language. I prove it in my book Primitive Sign Language. This knowledge is that Hebrew came from hand gestures. Only the people called Yeshar’Al, maintained the knowledge of the original language. Yahuah would not use another nation’s language which he confounded back in the Tower of Babel. Then, I did a deeper research and concluded Hebrew didn’t come from Hamite or from Babylon. I found contradictions and confusion when I attempted to draw meanings from the symbols after reading the first few pages. The failure with this book is stating that Hebrew came from Egyptian Hieroglyphs. You can access this book by visiting and searching or clicking the link, but don’t go there. Modern Hebrew utilizes Babylonian letters which seem to have been taken from Egyptian Hieroglyphs. The origins of Modern Hebrew are from Babylon.