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Practice Parashat Noach with TropeTrainer

Follow along with Hebrew text, trope cantillation marks, and audio at your own pace.

Practice Parashat Parashat Noach

Parashat Noach - פָּרָשַׁת נֹחַ

Noach (“Noah”) begins as God decides to destroy mankind with a flood. At God’s command, the righteous Noah builds an ark, where Noah, his family, and select animals survive the flood. Noah’s children bear children, and several generations develop. God confounds the speech of people building the Tower of Babel.

Torah Portion: Genesis 6:9-11:32

Parashat Noach is the 2nd weekly Torah portion in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading. Next read on October 17th, 2026 / 6 Cheshvan 5787

  • Annual Reading

    Read Annually


    1:

    6:9 - 6:22

    · 14 p’sukim

    2:

    7:1 - 7:16

    · 16 p’sukim

    3:

    7:17 - 8:14

    · 22 p’sukim

    4:

    8:15 - 9:7

    · 15 p’sukim

    5:

    9:8 - 9:17

    · 10 p’sukim

    6:

    9:18 - 10:32

    · 44 p’sukim

    7:

    11:1 - 11:32

    · 32 p’sukim

    Maftir:

    11:29 - 11:32

    · 4 p’sukim

    Haftarah for Sephardim:

    Isaiah 54:1 - 54:10

    · 10 p’sukim

    Haftarah for Ashkenazim:

    Isaiah 54:1 - 55:5

    · 22 p’sukim

  • Triennial Year 1

    October 25th, 2025


    1:

    6:9 - 6:16

    · 8 p’sukim

    2:

    6:17 - 6:19

    · 3 p’sukim

    3:

    6:20 - 6:22

    · 3 p’sukim

    4:

    7:1 - 7:9

    · 9 p’sukim

    5:

    7:10 - 7:16

    · 7 p’sukim

    6:

    7:17 - 7:24

    · 8 p’sukim

    7:

    8:1 - 8:14

    · 14 p’sukim

    Maftir:

    8:12 - 8:14

    · 3 p’sukim

    Alternate Haftarah:

    Isaiah 54:11 - 55:5

    · 12 p’sukim

  • Triennial Year 2

    October 17th, 2026


    1:

    8:15 - 8:22

    · 8 p’sukim

    2:

    9:1 - 9:7

    · 7 p’sukim

    3:

    9:8 - 9:17

    · 10 p’sukim

    4:

    9:18 - 9:29

    · 12 p’sukim

    5:

    10:1 - 10:14

    · 14 p’sukim

    6:

    10:15 - 10:20

    · 6 p’sukim

    7:

    10:21 - 10:32

    · 12 p’sukim

    Maftir:

    10:26 - 10:32

    · 7 p’sukim

    Alternate Haftarah:

    Isaiah 54:1 - 54:10

    · 10 p’sukim

  • Triennial Year 3

    November 6th, 2027


    1:

    11:1 - 11:4

    · 4 p’sukim

    2:

    11:5 - 11:9

    · 5 p’sukim

    3:

    11:10 - 11:13

    · 4 p’sukim

    4:

    11:14 - 11:17

    · 4 p’sukim

    5:

    11:18 - 11:21

    · 4 p’sukim

    6:

    11:22 - 11:25

    · 4 p’sukim

    7:

    11:26 - 11:32

    · 7 p’sukim

    Maftir:

    11:29 - 11:32

    · 4 p’sukim

    Alternate Haftarah:

    Zephaniah 3:9 - 3:20

    · 12 p’sukim

  • Weekday

    Shabbat afternoon, Monday & Thursday


    1:

    6:9 - 6:16

    · 8 p’sukim

    2:

    6:17 - 6:19

    · 3 p’sukim

    3:

    6:20 - 6:22

    · 3 p’sukim

Practice Parashat Noach with trope cantillation

This page breaks down every reading in Parashat Parashat Noach, including each aliyah, maftir, and haftarah with exact verse references. Click any section to open it in TropeTrainer and practice with full Hebrew text, trope marks, and audio.


Full reading breakdown

See every aliyah, maftir, and haftarah portion listed with exact chapter and verse references, so you know exactly what to prepare.

Practice with trope

Click any reading to open it in TropeTrainer with Hebrew text, trope cantillation marks, and audio you can follow along with at your own pace.

Triennial and full cycle options

View readings for the full kriyah or each year of the triennial cycle, so the breakdown always matches the schedule your community follows.

Upcoming reading dates

See when this parsha is next read on Shabbat and on weekdays, with direct links to start practicing for that date.


Frequently asked questions

What is a parsha?

A parsha (also called a parashah or Torah portion) is one of the 54 weekly sections of the Torah read aloud in synagogue on Shabbat. The cycle begins after Simchat Torah and runs through the entire Five Books of Moses over the course of a year.

What are the aliyot listed on this page?

Each parsha is divided into seven aliyot (sections) for Shabbat morning. This page lists every aliyah with its chapter and verse range so you can see the full structure of the reading and practice any individual section.

What is the triennial cycle?

The triennial cycle divides each parsha into three portions read over a three-year rotation, so the full Torah is completed every three years instead of every year. Many Conservative and some Reform congregations follow this schedule.

Can I listen to the chanting for this parsha?

Yes. Click any aliyah or reading link on this page to open it in TropeTrainer, where you can hear the full chanting with trope cantillation marks, follow along with the Hebrew text, and practice at your own speed.


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