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Well, due to Male/Female tense, there are a few ways to say this.

Ah-nee hoh-sheh-vet ah-lah-eech (female to female)

Ah-nee hoh-sheh-vet ah-leh-hah (female to male)

Ah-nee hoh-shev ah-lah-eech (male to female)

Ah-nee hoh-shev ah-leh-hah (male to male)

Hope that helped!

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βˆ™ 14y ago
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βˆ™ 14y ago

Notice that in Hebrew there is a difference between male and female when using verbs.

So asking a man you would say:


מה אתה חושב

MA ATA CHOSHEV


Asking a woman you would say:

מה את חושבת

MA AT CHOSHEVET

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βˆ™ 11y ago

la-ha-shov' = to think, spelled lamed, het, shin, vav, vet. The letter lamed is prefixed to the word and means, to, forming the infinitive.

ho-shev' = (I, you, he) thinks (m. pres. sing) spelled het, vav, shin, vet.

ho-sheh'-vet = (I, you, she) thinks (f. pres. sing) spelled het, vav, shin,tav.

hosh-vim' = (we, you, they) think (m. pres. pl.) spelled het, vav, shin, vet, yod, mem

hosh-vot' = (we, you, they) think(f. pres. pl.) spelled het, vav, shin, vet, vav, tav

Asides: ha-shav' = (I, you, he) thought (m. past sing.), spelled het, shin, vet. These 3 letters also form the root, from which the various verb tenses are built.

hash-vah' = (I, you, she) thought(f. past sing.), spelled het, shin, vet, heh. The letter heh with the ah vowel sound is the most common singular Hebrew feminine ending. It occurs frequently at the end of feminine nouns and adjectives. The most common plural feminine ending is vav, tav, as above in hosh-vot'.

Note: The Hebrew letter het is pronounced slightly gutturally, like the Spanish j sound, rather than the English h sound.

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βˆ™ 13y ago

I'm thinking of you (man to man): ani choshev alecha (אני חושב עליך)

I'm thinking of you (man to woman): ani choshev alayich (אני חושב עליך)

I'm thinking of you (woman to man): ani choshevet alecha (אני חושבת עליך)

I'm thinking of you (woman to woman): ani choshevet alayich (אני חושבת עליך)

I'm thinking of you (man to a group): ani choshev alechechem (אני חושב עליכם)

I'm thinking of you (woman to a group): ani choshevet alechem (אני חושבת עליכם)

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βˆ™ 12y ago

It depends on the context of the sentence. There is no exact translation for "mind", but are more than 10 different words that come close:

שֵׂכֶל

בִּינָה

דַּעַת

אִינְטֶלֶקְט

זִכָּרוֹן

מְגַמָּה

נְטִיָּה

שְׁאִיפָה

תּוֹדָעָה

מַחְשָׁבָה

נֶפֶשׁ

"your" would follow the word for mind, and it depends on whether the person is male or female:

feminine = שֶׁלַךְ (shelakh)

masculine = שֶׁלְךָ (shelkha)

example:

you might say to a male: ha-intelekt shelkha (האיטלקט שלך)

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βˆ™ 12y ago

people think in English so if you speak Hebrew you think in Hebrew

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βˆ™ 12y ago

As of 2012 there are about 6 million Hebrew speakers in Israel. Another 2 million outside of Israel speak it as a second language.

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βˆ™ 7y ago

Yes, a person can think in any language they know.

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βˆ™ 6y ago

As of 2017 there are about 6 million Hebrew speakers in Israel. Another 2 million outside of Israel speak it as a second language.

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Q: How you say thinking of you in Hebrew?
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