There is no Aramaic word for "Hello" in Aramaic. Culturally and historically, the greeting employed has been "Shlama" - Peace. This has carried over into Syriac as well as Arabic. Syriac: Shlama, Arabic: Salaam
Shlama is how you say hello in Aramaic.
Shlama, ma shlomakh?
The general greeting meaning "welcome" in Aramaic is "shlama," the cognate to the Hebrew term "shalom." You say it for hello, you often say it for goodbye, you say it to mean "peace," and so on. It's a very versatile word. It literally derives from the root for "to be whole" or "to be complete."You can see an example of "shlama" written out in Aramaic script on the Aramaic Designs homepage (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/) on the right hand side in a gray box that says "peace" and "Get a Translation Now."--Aramaic Designs (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/)
You can say friend in Aramaic using the word "re'aya."
סברא (Sabra) hope in Aramaic
how do you say i love Jesus in Aramaic
The general greeting meaning "welcome" in Aramaic is "shlama," the cognate to the Hebrew term "shalom." You say it for hello, you often say it for goodbye, you say it to mean "peace," and so on. It's a very versatile word. It literally derives from the root for "to be whole" or "to be complete."You can see an example of "shlama" written out in Aramaic script on the Aramaic Designs homepage (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/) on the right hand side in a gray box that says "peace" and "Get a Translation Now."--Aramaic Designs (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/)
how do you say i love Jesus in Aramaic
I = ana (אנא)There is no Aramaic word for "is"
James in Aramaic is Ya'akov (יעקוב)
The Aramaic word for brother is "אח," pronounced as "ahkh."
סברא (Sabra) hope in Aramaic
how do you say i love Jesus in Aramaic
You can say friend in Aramaic using the word "re'aya."
Babylonian/Jerusalem Aramaic: Yaloda or Shabra
Ashley is pronounced the same in Aramaic as it is in English.
There is no Aramaic word for phoenix. This is a Greek concept that was never written about in any Aramaic texts.
Shaqia is used in classical Aramaic for Medicines and for Potions.