חבל שאין לנו זמן לשבת ביחד.

Breakdown of חבל שאין לנו זמן לשבת ביחד.

אין
there is no
ביחד
together
לשבת
to sit
זמן
time
ש
that
לנו
to us
חבל
a pity

Questions & Answers about חבל שאין לנו זמן לשבת ביחד.

What does חבל mean here? I thought it meant rope.

Yes, חבל can literally mean rope, but in this sentence it means it’s a shame / what a pity.

This is a very common expression in Hebrew:

חבל ש... = It’s a shame that...

So:

חבל שאין לנו זמן... = It’s a shame that we don’t have time...

Hebrew often uses the same word in very different meanings, and this is one of those cases.

Why is it שאין and not just אין?

The ש means that.

So:

  • אין לנו זמן = We don’t have time
  • חבל שאין לנו זמן = It’s a shame that we don’t have time

In writing, Hebrew often attaches ש directly to the next word, so:

  • ש + אין = שאין

That whole part introduces the clause after חבל.

What does אין לנו זמן literally mean?

Literally, it means something like:

There is not to us time

That sounds strange in English, but this is how Hebrew expresses possession.

Hebrew does not normally use a present-tense verb meaning to have. Instead, it uses:

  • יש ל... = there is / have
  • אין ל... = there isn’t / don’t have

So:

  • יש לנו זמן = we have time
  • אין לנו זמן = we don’t have time

And:

  • לנו = to us / for us
Why does Hebrew use לנו for we have?

Because possession in Hebrew is built with יש and אין, plus a phrase with ל־.

Examples:

  • יש לי = I have
    literally: there is to me
  • יש לך = you have
  • יש לנו = we have
  • אין לנו = we don’t have

So לנו is not random here—it is the normal way Hebrew says we have / we don’t have.

Why is לשבת used here? Doesn’t it literally mean to sit?

Yes, לשבת literally means to sit, but it is also often used more broadly in Hebrew for:

  • to sit together
  • to spend time together
  • to hang out
  • to sit and talk

So in this sentence, לשבת ביחד does not necessarily mean only physically sitting. It can mean to spend some time together in a natural, conversational sense.

Why is there a ל־ at the beginning of לשבת?

That ל־ marks the infinitive, so לשבת means to sit.

In Hebrew, the infinitive usually begins with ל־, similar to English to:

  • לאכול = to eat
  • ללכת = to go
  • לשבת = to sit

After a noun like זמן in a phrase such as זמן לשבת, Hebrew uses the infinitive:

  • זמן לשבת = time to sit / time to spend time
What does ביחד mean? Is it the same as יחד?

ביחד means together.

It is very close in meaning to יחד, and in many situations they are interchangeable.

So:

  • לשבת ביחד
  • לשבת יחד

both mean to sit/spend time together.

A learner will often hear ביחד in everyday speech. יחד can sometimes sound a little more neutral or slightly more formal depending on context, but both are common.

Why is there no word for is in the sentence?

Because Hebrew often does not use a present-tense form of to be the way English does.

In English you say:

It is a shame

In Hebrew, you simply say:

חבל

Likewise, Hebrew does not use a present-tense verb to have in the same way English does. Instead it uses יש and אין.

So the sentence may feel shorter or more compact than English, but it is completely normal Hebrew.

Could the sentence be said in a different word order?

Yes, but the given version is very natural:

חבל שאין לנו זמן לשבת ביחד.

It is built like this:

  • חבל = it’s a shame
  • שאין לנו זמן = that we don’t have time
  • לשבת ביחד = to sit / spend time together

You could also hear small variations, such as:

  • חבל שאין לנו זמן לשבת יחד
  • אין לנו זמן לשבת ביחד, חבל

But the original sentence is the most straightforward and natural way to say it.

How is this sentence pronounced?

A simple pronunciation guide is:

chaval she-ein lanu zman lashevet beyachad

A few notes:

  • ח is pronounced like a throaty ch sound, not like English h
  • שאין is pronounced roughly she-ein
  • זמן = zman
  • ביחד = beyachad

So the full sentence sounds roughly like:

chaval she-ein lanu zman lashevet beyachad

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