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[HANASHIR:7647] Re: Torah Study Aid f
- From: Freedabet <Freedabet...>
- Subject: [HANASHIR:7647] Re: Torah Study Aid f
- Date: Thu 14 Dec 2000 19.49 (GMT)
If you use V'ahavta (which most people have heard in some version) as a
model, you'll probably have some re-teaching to do to make it match the trope
you're actually using. If you haven't sat down with the text and looked at
it carefully (or, probably even if you have) you're probably doing some
things out of habit that don't match your chosen trope system.
Michael
-------- REPLY, Original message follows --------
> Date: Wednesday, 13-Dec-00 12:15 PM
>
> From: Rachelle and Howard Shubert \ Internet: (notfranz (at) total(dot)net)
> To: Hanashir Mail Server \ Internet: (hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org)
>
> Subject: [HANASHIR:7633] Re: Torah Study Aid f
>
> Sender: owner-hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org
> Reply-to: hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org
> To: hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org
> Thanks for all these great tips about studying trope. I am applying all of
> them to my study regime. One thing I am also doing, which seems to be
> effective, is to photocopy the Torah trope reference pages at the back of
> THE ART OF TORAH CANTILLATION, folded over so the right side of the page
> with the names of the tropes written in Hebrew is actually blank. Then I am
> writing in the trope symbols under using boxes instead of words. I fold the
> paper over and chant the sequences from the boxes. I flip the page whenever
> I am stuck.
>
> I am curious as to how many Reform religious schools actually teach
> trope-reading? I find our kids don't learn to recognize the tropes but are
> given tapes to memorize.
>
> Rachelle Shubert
>
>
>
>
>
-------- REPLY, End of original message --------
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- [HANASHIR:7647] Re: Torah Study Aid f,
Freedabet