There is no Hebrew word for Hell. In modern Hebrew, the word Hell is translated from movies and TV as Geh Hinom (= the Valley of Hinom, which is an ancient garbage dump outside Jerusalem).
Since Hinom is not a place of burning, this phrase wouldn't make any sense.
"Lech La-azazel" (לך לעזאזל).
Go to hell = Dra til helvete
a way to write it 地獄行きだ- Go To Hell or a way to say it 'Jigoku ni itte' - go to hell
go
No it does not, say that
-----------------------Cain is part of the Hebrew scriptures and if we must determine his fate, we should do so based on Hebrew beliefs. In the first millennium BCE, Hebrew belief posited sheol, a place or state with no reward and no punishment, more a state of semi-consciousness. Even today, Jews do not have a hell. On that basis we ought to assume that Cain did not go to hell.
There is no mention of "hell" in the Hebrew Bible, nor is there any ancient Hebrew word for "hell". The concept didn't exist until the time of the earliest of Christians.
In Malayalam, you can say "നരകത്തിലേക്ക് പോ" (narakttilēkk pō) to convey the phrase "go to hell."
29 times go on youtube and gives you hell lyrics and there u go
no if go to hell your there to stay for eternity torminted with out end
No. People say that.
There is no actual Jewish concept equivalent to 'hell'. The word is usually translated in movies as "Geh Hinom" (the valley of Hinom, which is an ancient garbage dump in Israel).
"גיי צו גײַנום" (gay tsu gaynum) is how you say "go to hell" in Yiddish.