House of many toilets = בית בן הרבה ×מבטיות bayit ben harbeh ambatiot.
well, you cant say house in Jewish but house in Hebrew is biet ( pronouced by eat)
We say "Where are the toilets?". Note it is "where" not "wear".
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
In that sentence, you would usually use the infinitive in Hebrew (to buy): liknot (×œ×§× ×•×ª) "buying a house is...." liknot bayit zeh..."
beit khayim (בית חיים), however, this happens to be the Hebrew phrase for "cemetery".
you say, You have two toilets,,, Water everywhere in house, Except the two toilets? Contact me in my personal message board, Give more details
beit zkhukhit (בית זכוכית)
There is no Hebrew word that means "household" but you could say: מֶשֶׁק בַּיִת (meshek bayit), which means, "the settlement of the house."
We say "Where are the toilets?". Note it is "where" not "wear".
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew