YES
It's the name of a book in the Hebrew Bible, and the name of the female protagonist of that book.
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Ruth (רות) is a Hebrew name which was derived from the Hebrew word רְעוּת (re'ut) meaning "friend".
meespareem. (if you are referring to the book of the Bible, it's got a completely different name in Hebrew: "bameedbar")
The name "Ruth" is a word that came directly from Hebrew with very little change. The Hebrew pronunciation is "ROOS" for Ashkenazic Hebrew speakers, and "ROOT" for Sephardic Hebrew speakers.
The name Mayra doesn't occur in the Hebrew Bible.
'Naomi' comes from the Hebrew name נָעֳמִי (Na'omiy) meaning "pleasantness". It appears in the Old Testament as the name of the mother-in-law of Ruth. It is also a name in Japan, where it translates to "honest and beautiful."
The Tanakh; the Tanach; the Hebrew scriptures; the Jewish Bible.
Bible names for women seem to stay on the single given name; so I suppose the Bible name for Ruth would be the same - simply Ruth.
There is no such name in Hebrew. That name is of latin origin, and does not appear in the Bible.
There is no such thing as the term "canon" in Hebrew. If you are asking what the Jewish Bible is called, it is the Tanakh (תנך) or Hebrew Bible.
For Jews, the Hebrew Bible is called the Tanakh. For Christians it is the Old Testament.