No. "Hebrew" is a language, not a person. The people living in Jerusalem today Speak Hebrew and Arabic.
No it is not. It is a language spoken in Israel, and by Jews all over the world.
Copenhagen has no meaning in Hebrew, other than the name of a Danish city. (Only Hebrew names have meaning in Hebrew.)
Jerusalem
Jerusalem
עיר (pronounced like "ear")
If you are asking what the hebrew word bo, means, it depends on how you spell it: בוא = come! בו = in him, in it, with him, with it בו = Bo (a city in Sierra Leone)
No, it is a Greek name that means "From the city of Lydia"
Rebecca, a Hebrew name, came from the City of Nahor or the City of Ur in the land of Shinar.
The one Hebrew God is a universal God. This belief includes the idea that God is everywhere at all times, so you can't say that God was in a certain city at a certain time. God is always in every city.
Tel Aviv is a city in Israel, where Hebrew and Arabic are the official languages.
As Haifa is a major city in Israel, their main language is Hebrew.
Shakim is the old Hebrew word for the city of Nablus.
The City of Jerusalem was built by the Israelites who, at that time, spoke only Hebrew. Some argue that they spoke Old Canaanite, but Hebrew and Old Canaanite are just dialects of each other.