Rehab Room is Israeli

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fodenglazer

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It has been very well know in the community that Rehab Room is Israeli, and apart from the missed Friday and Irani strike incident, here are some proves..

  • “Th” pronounced as “d” is very common among Hebrew speakers because Hebrew doesn’t have the “th” sound. So “this” becomes “dis,” “that” becomes “dat,” etc.
  • Using “yous” as a plural of “you” can happen in informal English influenced by other languages, and some Israeli English speakers adopt that in casual speech.
  • The strong “k” sound fits with Hebrew phonetics, which have crisp, hard consonants.
  • The “jija” instead of “giga” might be a pronunciation quirk or a Hebrew-influenced way of saying “giga” or another word, especially if the “g” sound is sometimes softened or shifted.
 
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It has been very well know in the community that Rehab Room is Israeli, and apart from the missed Friday and Irani strike incident, here are some proves..

  • “Th” pronounced as “d” is very common among Hebrew speakers because Hebrew doesn’t have the “th” sound. So “this” becomes “dis,” “that” becomes “dat,” etc.
  • Using “yous” as a plural of “you” can happen in informal English influenced by other languages, and some Israeli English speakers adopt that in casual speech.
  • The strong “k” sound fits with Hebrew phonetics, which have crisp, hard consonants.
  • The “jija” instead of “giga” might be a pronunciation quirk or a Hebrew-influenced way of saying “giga” or another word, especially if the “g” sound is sometimes softened or shifted.
Hes turkish i know that accent
 
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Yh I thought it was known he's from south Turkey or somewhere
 
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He's Turkish
 
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It has been very well know in the community that Rehab Room is Israeli, and apart from the missed Friday and Irani strike incident, here are some proves..

  • “Th” pronounced as “d” is very common among Hebrew speakers because Hebrew doesn’t have the “th” sound. So “this” becomes “dis,” “that” becomes “dat,” etc.
  • Using “yous” as a plural of “you” can happen in informal English influenced by other languages, and some Israeli English speakers adopt that in casual speech.
  • The strong “k” sound fits with Hebrew phonetics, which have crisp, hard consonants.
  • The “jija” instead of “giga” might be a pronunciation quirk or a Hebrew-influenced way of saying “giga” or another word, especially if the “g” sound is sometimes softened or shifted.
Hebrew doesn't have a J
 

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