to a male: shalom uvaruch haba (×©×•×œ×•× ×•×‘×¨×•×š הב×)
to a female: shalom uvrucha haba'a (×©×•×œ×•× ×•×‘×¨×•×›×” הב××”)
to a group: shalom uvruchim haba'im (×©×•×œ×•× ×•×‘×¨×•×›×™× ×”×‘××™×)
"Welcome home" in Hebrew letters: In singular form: ברוך ×”×‘× Singular form, for a female: ברוכה הב××” In plural: ×‘×¨×•×›×™× ×”×‘××™× In plural, for females only: ברוכות הב×ות
Welcome home:
Said to a male = barúch habá (ברוך הב×)
Said to a female = bruchá haba'á (ברוכה הב××”)
Said to a group = bruchÃm haba'Ãm (×‘×¨×•×›×™× ×”×‘××™×)
brukhim haba'im leyisra'el (?????? ????? ?????? )
brukhim haba'im leyisrael = ברוכים הבאים לישראל
Plural- Bru'chim Haba'im
Singular male- Baruch Haba
Singular female- Baruch'a Haba'a
shalom which means hello goodbye and peace in Hebrew
brukhim haba'im leyisra'el (×‘×¨×•×›×™× ×”×‘××™× ×œ×™×©×¨×ל )
brukhim haba'im leyisra'el (×‘×¨×•×›×™× ×”×‘××™× ×œ×™×©×¨×ל )
Selamat datang ke Israel
Dobro Pojalovat' v Izrael
Selamat datang ke Israel
shalom means hello goodbye and peace
In Bahamian dialect, the word "welcome" is often pronounced as "welkum."
welcome in Hebrew is "baroch haba" or "shalom" or "brocim habaim"
イスラエル (isuraeru) is the Japanese word for "Israel".
The word for welcome in Hawaiian is "aloha".
You can say "ā°ļāąā°ĩā°ūā°ā°Īā°" (swagatam) in Telugu to say welcome.
The Chuukese word for welcome depends on what time of day. For example: Morning- Ran anim....After noon-Nekunion Anim.....Night- Nepwong Anim. But if you mean welcome when you say Thank you then you say Kinisou back.
Willkommen - pronounced vill'kommen
欢迎/Huānyíng