Use the Hebrew scriptures as a Rosetta Stone, of sorts.The word Yahudah is
His people and He said His name was in His people.The words are written
alike except for the dalet.Take away the dalet and you have Yahu-ah...These
two Yahu and ah are found in most of the Hebrew names if you will but study
them. There was no V's in the original language.It was a wah which has an oo
sound like in moon...Yod=Y,hey=H,wah=W and another hey=H,Ya-hoo-ah,or
Yahuah...

On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 3:11 PM, cindiclean <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> OK, Rich, I saw the video and still have questions, although I will have to
> continue thinking about the video and what it was saying. One of the things
> the narrator said was that the terms Yahweh and so forth were meaningless in
> Hebrew. Why would they be meaningless in Hebrew?
>
> Now to what is said in the jewish encyclopedia online about the
> tetragrammaton. First off, the statement was made by one of the writers
> there that the pronunciation of Jehovah is grammatically impossible. How so?
> And if the pronunciation of "Jehovah" is grammatically impossible, would
> "Yahweh" be grammtically acceptable, or possible?
>
> Thank you.
>
>  
>

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