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Null-subject language
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===Hebrew=== [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] is considered a partially null-subject language, as demonstrated by the following example: {{interlinear|indent=3 |top= ืขืืืจ ืืืืจืื, ืืขืืจื ืื |azor l'acherim, ya'azru l'kha |help others, will-help you |You help others, they will help you.}} Subjects can usually be omitted only when the verb is conjugated for grammatical person, as in the third-person plural in the example above. In Hebrew one can also construct null-subject sentences as in the Latin and Turkish language examples: "We/you/they are going to the beach" can be expressed as "holkhim la-yam" (ืืืืืื ืืื), lit. "Are going to the beach." This is truly a null-subject construction. As in Spanish and Turkish, though, Hebrew conjugates verbs in accordance with specific pronouns, so "we went to the beach" is technically just as much a null-subject construction as in the other languages, but in fact the conjugation does indicate the subject pronoun: "Halakhnu la-yam" (ืืืื ื ืืื), lit. "Went (we) to the beach." The word "halakhnu" means "we went", just as the Spanish and Turkish examples indicate the relevant pronoun as the subject in their conjugation. So these should perhaps not be considered to be true null-subject phrases. Potentially confusing the issue further is the fact that Hebrew word order can also make some sentences appear to be null-subject, when the subject is in fact given after the verb. For instance, "it's raining" is expressed "yored geshem" (ืืืจื ืืฉื), which means "descends rain"; "rain" is the subject. The phrases meaning "It's snowing" and "It's hailing" are formed in the same way.{{citation needed|date=September 2021}}
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