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  1. Hebrew Numbers Chart ©2017 JTeach.org Board of Jewish Education of Metropolitan Chicago’s Online Resource Center 21 ת ח ַםי ר ש ע 22 םי י ת שוַּםי ר ש ע 23 שולַֹ שַ ַםי ר ש ע 30 םי שולֹ ש 40 םיַ עַ בַ רַ 50 םיַ שיַ מֲַח 60 םיַ שיַ ש 70 םיַ עַ ַ ש 80 םיַ נומַ ש

  2. hebrewresources.com › hebrew-letter-chartsHebrew Letter Charts

    Letter charts showing the Hebrew consonants, vowels, and their literal and symbolic meanings and numerical (Gematria) values.

  3. Bring Gus on the Go to life with this free set of Hebrew Numbers Flashcard Set! These full colored flashcards make learning fun as a companion piece to Gus on the Go: Hebrew. The numbers 1-10 are represented in this printable. Print the pdf, cut around the cards and start counting!

  4. You’re almost ready to count from 1 to 100 in Hebrew. You already know 20 and 100. And you know the te ns (30, 40, 50… 90). Now it’s time for all the numbers in between. Numbers like 21, 35, 49, 88, 96 and so on. This is super easy. All you need is this simple rule.

  5. Fun and educational worksheets for children. Free to download. Learn the Hebrew alphabet, practice writing the aleph bet, sticker activity worksheets, matching, numbers, Shabbat activity sheets and more.

  6. Hebrew Letters for Numbers. Hebrew traditionally (before the modern era) didn’t have a separate set of numerals. Instead, each letter of the alphabet was assigned a value, starting with (alef to yod), then (yod to qof), then (qof to tav).

  7. Learning Hebrew: Numbers. Hebrew does not have a separate set of numerical symbols. The cardinal numbers are used for counting and the ordinal numbers are used to indicate position in a series. In Hebrew, twenty-one and similar numbers occur as twenty-and-one or one-and-twenty.

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