I really hope you mean "blessed feats" and not "blessed feets".
Blessed feats = ma'asim bruchim (×ž×¢×©×™× ×‘×¨×•×›×™×)
Blessed feets = raglayim bruchot (×¨×’×œ×™×™× ×‘×¨×•×›×•×ª)
blessed are you Lord = baruch atah Adonai (בָּרוּךְ אַַתָּה יְיָ)
"What if your Welcome" cannot be translated into Hebrew, because "your welcome" in Hebrew is literally "blessed is he/she who comes" You can say, "what if it happens that you are permitted to enter" = ma yikreh im mutar lekha/lakh lehikanes.
Hebrew doesn't use symbols. It uses letters. The Hebrew words for twice blessed are: מבורך פעמיים (mevorach pa'amayim)
The name 'Baruch' is a Hebrew name. Its meaning in English is 'blessed'.
The same way all Hebrew-speaking Jews say welcome. It depends on who you are welcoming: said to a male: baruch haba (ברוך הבא) said to a female: brucha haba'a (ברוכה הבאה) said to a group: bruchim haba'im (ברוכים הבאים) It literally means "blessed [is] he/she who comes" or "blessed [are] those who come"
Baruch (ברוך)
what is 987654321x9876154321-12?
It literally means "the name is blessed", but it's used in the same way as when English speakers say "Thank God."
Baruch (ברוך)
Baruch is a Hebrew word meaning blessed
hayeladim mevorchim al yedei Hashem (הילדים מבורכים על ידי ה׳)
No meaning; though it's not unlike the Hebrew name Baruch, which means blessed.