"Gee-bow" would be spelled ג׳י־בו (read from right to left).
In Hebrew, "Gee-bow" would be spelled ΧΦ΄'ΧΦ°ΧΦΌΧΦΉ.
gee
No. The ancient weapon related to a halberd is a ji (pronounced gee).
eye ehn gee
Hebrew doesn't work like that. There isn't a one-to-one correspondence for Hebrew and English letters. In other words, not every English letter has an exact Hebrew letter to match.There is a Hebrew letter for G (ג) as a hard G, but for the foreign sound of J, the same letter (ג) is used.If you want to spell "Gee Jay" it would be ג׳י ג׳יי
the letter 'g' is spelled 'gee'.
gibor (גיבור)gibor (gee-bore) גיבור -
There is only one way to spell "bow", but there are two ways to pronounce "bow." [bou] as in to bend over and also [boh] as in a wooden archer's bow.
The island country is Fiji (fee-gee).
How do you spell "Gerhard-us Koenraad" in Hebrew
There is no equivalent in Hebrew for "Ashlei" but you can spell it אשלי
It depends on how you spell kara in Hebew:קרה = to happenקרא = to call, to name, to cry outכרה = to dig upכרע = to kneelקרע = to rip
Tri(short i sound)-low-gee or it can be pronounced Tri-la-gee