Illustration Credit: Elad Lifshitz, Dov Abramson Studio
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/sheet-user-uploaded-media/118595-cb2cbc18-7cdc-11ec-b784-a68f9f7406f3.png)
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/sheet-user-uploaded-media/118595-d19fd5bc-7cdc-11ec-89bd-5e20b59e4a88.png)
Etnahta is one of the most common notes in the Torah. Its job is to mark a stopping point in the middle of the verse; you can think of it like a colon or a semicolon in English. It looks kind of like a wishbone, but also like something firmly at rest, and the word etnahta means a resting point!
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/sheet-user-uploaded-media/118595-c03345d6-7d2f-11ec-b8d4-cea5b2be365c.png)
The etnahta is everywhere, but sometimes (thirteen times in the whole Torah, to be exact) it appears on the first word in a verse. Our parashah has two examples of this:
וַיֹּאמַ֑ר פָּנַ֥י יֵלֵ֖כוּ וַהֲנִחֹ֥תִי לָֽךְ׃
And He said: My face will go, and I will lighten your burden
וַיֹּאמַ֑ר הַרְאֵ֥נִי נָ֖א אֶת־כְּבֹדֶֽךָ׃
He said: Please, let me behold Your Presence!
See if you can find all the verses in our parashah that don’t have an etnahta. Hint: there are seven!
-------------------
-------------------
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/sheet-user-uploaded-media/118595-f1c456b2-78e3-11ec-a762-622cd80bc73b.png)