beit khayim (בית ×—×™×™×), however, this happens to be the Hebrew phrase for "cemetery".
well, you cant say house in Jewish but house in Hebrew is biet ( pronouced by eat)
The House of The Lord is a HOLY place where The Almighty dwells. If you are asking how to say this in Hebrew, it is: בית השם = beit hashem
beyt zahav (בית זהב)
בית של ×הבה
Second life = chayim shni'im (חיים שניים)
In that sentence, you would usually use the infinitive in Hebrew (to buy): liknot (×œ×§× ×•×ª) "buying a house is...." liknot bayit zeh..."
It's the same in both Ancient Hebrew and Modern Hebrew: ספר החיים (Sefer ha-Chayim)
beit zkhukhit (בית זכוכית)
The tree of life = etz ha-chayim (עץ החיים)
There is no Hebrew word that means "household" but you could say: מֶשֶׁק בַּיִת (meshek bayit), which means, "the settlement of the house."
mateh khayyim (מטה חיים)
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew