There is currently no online translator in existence that will translate English to Hebrew with vowels. You would have to contact a human translator.
You can translate single words using Morfix (listed under related links), but there is no online translator that will do full text with vowels.
The English letter V and the Hebrew letter Vav, have the exact same pronunciation.
They are dots and dashes above, below, and inside of the letters:
without vowels׃
שלו×
with vowels:
ש×ָלוֹ×
.
Ila is pronounced exactly the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
Bridgette is pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
Its pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
Israelis would pronounce the name Kenneth as Kenet, since there is no th in Hebrew.
It is pronounced the same as in English.
In English: Sawl. In Hebrew: Shaool.
Getsatsah doesn't appear to be a Hebrew word.
It's pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English. It is also related to the Hebrew name Gavriela (גבריאלה)
If you're asking what the Hebrew equivalent of Suzanne is, it's shoshanah (×©×•×©× ×”). If you're asking how to pronounce the word "Suzanne" in Hebrew, it would be about the same as in English.
English speakers typically pronounce it "KANE-en". The Hebrew word is pronounced "K'NAH-ahn".
The Hebrew word kara (קרא meaning to read, call, or כרע meaning to rip) is pronounced kah-RAH in English.
"Vete" is pronounced "VEH-teh" with the stress on the first syllable.