It varies, depending on the sentence, but one way is:
echad et ha sheni (×חד ×ת ×”×©× ×™)
the best way to translate this is to say lehitra'ot (להתראות), which literally means "to see each other"
to support each other = לתמוך זה בזה (litmokh zeh bezeh)
No languages descended from Hebrew. But you could say that Biblical Hebrew is the root of Modern Hebrew. Also, Yiddish and other Jewish languages such as Ladino, had a significant percentage of Hebrew.
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew
Dreams look the same in Hebrew as in any other language. The experience itself is called "kha-LOME" in Hebrew.
Has in Hebrew is: YESH
"Tikra" (תקרה) is how you say ceiling in Hebrew.
You don't. You only say Shabbat shalom in Hebrew. If you are asking how French Jews greet each other on Shabbat, they say "Shabbat Shalom"
Hakhi Kachol (accent the second syllable in each word). It means "most blue."
Ken and in Hebrew כן
"Boyfriend" in Hebrew is "khaver."
The word "My" in Hebrew is pronounced: "Sheli"