HEBREW TERMS FOR TOURISTS AND WOULD-BE NEW IMMIGRANTS
Every tourist who goes to a country wherein the local yokels speak another language (like Canada) is advised to have a little handbook with a list of the words you are most likely to hear and that will help you in situations you're most likely to find yourself in.
Here's my suggestions of the most commonly heard terms in Israel that
you should know.
Alimoot: violence
Atzabim: nerves, a case of the nerves
Balagan: mess, shambles, confusion
Boged: traitor, renegade, turncoat
Combina: artful manipulation or clever ruse, scam or Ponzi scheme
Dafuk: fucked up, non compos mentis
Hasata: incitement, sedition
Hotza'ah L'Fo'al: The Repo authority. Every town has one. Far north, out
of the way Kiryat Shmonah is about it get one. If you need a bathroom nearby
and quick just ask anyone on the street: Ayfo Hotza'ash L'Fo'al?
Ma'Am: no, not lady. Value Added Tax. It's 17% here. Suck it up, bucko.
Maatzar Minhali: Administrative detention
Mayseet - agitator, inciter, firebrand, instigator, troublemaker
Mesukan: dangerous
Mesukan me'od: very dangerous
Mesukan me'od me'od: extremely dangerous
Mesukan me'od me'od me'o-o-o-d: ultra dangerous (like sitting in a
coffee house, for instance)
Mishtara: police
Oshek: Extortion
Overdraft: overdraught, overdraft
Pachad (guttural ch): fear
Pachad Mavet: something that scares you to death (like a knock at the door after you've posted Hasata)
Refurbished: an electric or electronic item sold as new
Shakran: liar
Shiga'on: insanity
S'tom!: Shut up! (masc. but the ladies'll understand too)
Terror: terror
Terror: terror
Tzava: army
Tzava'a: will and testament
Va'adat Hasamah: The committee of social workers, and sometimes other
pros, that met without legal mandate to do so and without informing you so that
you couldn't be there to put in two words who are now informing you, with the
full local Mishtara in force, that they are taking your children away to an
undisclosed setting. No. No. It wasn't because you were abusive, or even that
they think you are. It's because they need to meet the local quotas of kids to
put up for adoption or institutionalize and you seem vulnerable because your
Hebrew isn't that good.
That's it. That's all you'll ever need to know to feel like a real
Israeli.