While listening to Sheep Farm podcast i came across the following :
Divoc is a term derived from the Hebrew word ‘dybbuk’, which is an evil spirit capable of possessing other creatures, and it’s believed to be the suffering soul of the dead. The dybbuk is the soul of an evil person who’s soul wants to evade the punishment and tries to stay on this dimension by possessing another body.
Dybbuks are believed to posses poorly evolved creatures.
Google search includes some lame debunking efforts including Newsweek, there is also a comic called 91 DIVOC, a song and then few websites that make no sense whatsoever, this one especially raised my eyebrow:
91-divoc.com
If i use google translate i get this when i input DIVOC:
דיבוק - obsessed
So definitely creepy.
Do we have any Hebrew experts on this forum?
Divoc is a term derived from the Hebrew word ‘dybbuk’, which is an evil spirit capable of possessing other creatures, and it’s believed to be the suffering soul of the dead. The dybbuk is the soul of an evil person who’s soul wants to evade the punishment and tries to stay on this dimension by possessing another body.
Dybbuks are believed to posses poorly evolved creatures.
Google search includes some lame debunking efforts including Newsweek, there is also a comic called 91 DIVOC, a song and then few websites that make no sense whatsoever, this one especially raised my eyebrow:
An interactive visualization of COVID-19 | 91-DIVOC
An interactive, data-forward visualization of COVID-19 data by Prof. Wade at The University of Illinois. Updated daily.
91-divoc.com
If i use google translate i get this when i input DIVOC:
דיבוק - obsessed
So definitely creepy.
Do we have any Hebrew experts on this forum?
Hebrew "for adults" is being written without punctuation that signifies vowels. Only kids (or those who learn Hebrew) are reading with punctuation when they learn how to intuitivly pronounce vowels based on the specific order of the letters in the word.
