Blessing = brachah (ברכה)
blessing = brakhah (ברכה) favor = khen (חן)
beit bracha shel hashem (בית ברכה של ה׳)
"at brakha" means "you are a blessing"
it depends on the blessing and religion in Hebrew most but not all start with"baruch atah adoni"
If you mean "brachah" (ברכה), it means "blessing". There's no such Hebrew word as brakah.
The Hebrew language doesn't use symbols. It uses letters and words. the phrase "blessing from heaven" is ברכה מהשם (brakha mehashem).
It is spelled: ברכת אברהם.
Bracha (ברכה) means blessing.
If you are talking about sneezes it's labriyut (לבריות).If you are talking about actual blessing, it will depend on the number and gender of who is being blessed:to a man: yevarechecha elohimto a woman yevarechech elohimto a group: yevarechechem elohimdee zolst zein gebencht
if by jewish, you mean hebrew, there are many names that are similar Arabic: Barack Hebrew: Baruch (blessing) Arabic: Malik Hebrew: Melech (king)
Yes. Bracha (which means blessing in Hebrew - ברכה) appears in the Jerusalem phone book about 40 times, as a surname.
If you are speaking of a deceased person, you would say zichrona livracha ("may her memory be a blessing"). Otherwise, there's no concept of blessing souls in Judaism, so this phrase would not be used.