ṭb ymyrh
The word 'Welcome' in Aramaic is written as 'ܢܫܢܠܡ' which is pronounced as "nashimlom".
The word "word" in Aramaic is written as "מליתא" pronounced as "miltha".
The general greeting meaning "welcome" in Aramaic is "shlama," the cognate to the Hebrew term "shalom." You say it for hello, you often say it for goodbye, you say it to mean "peace," and so on. It's a very versatile word. It literally derives from the root for "to be whole" or "to be complete."You can see an example of "shlama" written out in Aramaic script on the Aramaic Designs homepage (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/) on the right hand side in a gray box that says "peace" and "Get a Translation Now."--Aramaic Designs (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/)
The word "word" in Aramaic is "milta".
The Aramaic word for gold is "zahav."
The word for "son" in Aramaic is "bar".
Tetelestai is a Greek word, and has no standard spelling in Aramaic. I would write it phonetically in Aramaic as תתלסתי
The word "word" in Aramaic is written as "מליתא" pronounced as "miltha".
מלאכא - Malaka
מברכא - M'barkha
The general greeting meaning "welcome" in Aramaic is "shlama," the cognate to the Hebrew term "shalom." You say it for hello, you often say it for goodbye, you say it to mean "peace," and so on. It's a very versatile word. It literally derives from the root for "to be whole" or "to be complete."You can see an example of "shlama" written out in Aramaic script on the Aramaic Designs homepage (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/) on the right hand side in a gray box that says "peace" and "Get a Translation Now."--Aramaic Designs (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/)
"Willkommen" is the German word for "welcome".
The tetragrammaton (the four consonants of God's name) are written exactly the same in Hebrew as they are in Aramaic: יהוהThere is no such word as iahveh.
The word "word" in Aramaic is "milta".
You can write Kaleb in Aramaic like that ܟܠܒ. In Jewish Aramaic it would be spelled like this: כלב
The Aramaic word for light is "Bahro" The above answer is Syriac. The Aramaic word (Jerusalem/Babylon Aramaic) is Nahira.
Unconditional love in aramaic
There is no word for trinity in classical Aramaic, since the concept didn't exist until after Aramaic ceased to be spoken.In Modern Syriac Aramaic, the word ܬܠܝܬܝܘܬܐ is used.