You simply ask for them in Hebrew אפשר לתרץ בעברית, אבל לא לשאול בעברית עדיין One day we will also have a Hebrew site
he answers = hu oneh (הוא ×¢×•× ×”) he answered = hu anah (הוא ×¢× ×”)
The Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and the Talmud would both be correct answers.
Your question answers itself. (In Hebrew, we pronounce it Yisrael, but it's the same word.)
Augie = alef vav gimel yod (it can't be spelled out on answers . com until they fix the bug that prevents Hebrew letters from displaying.)
Well, there are several answers to this question. Sarah has a Hebrew origin and it means "Princess" Sarah is AWESOME!
you can't. But you can try using an online translator.
For English, the question answers itself.In Hebrew, you'd call it a Bat-Mitzvah meshutefet.
The general answer to either "Salaam Alekem" (Arabic) or "Sholom Aleichem" (Hebrew) is reversing the words. Therefore, in Arabic it would be "Alekem Salaam," while in Hebrew it would be "Aleichem Sholom."
The most common Hebrew word for prayer is tfeelah (תפילה) and it has a slightly broader meaning than the English word "prayer". It includes any communication with God, including melodies without words.
There is no single word for "God answers", but you could say Hashem oneh (ה׳ ×¢×•× ×”)
The book of Proverbs comes after Psalms in the Old Testament. These two books follow the same order in the Hebrew bible as well.
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