It depends on whether "you" refers to a male or a female:
to male: im yesh lekha emunah (??? ?? ?? ?????)
to female: im yesh lakh emunah (??? ?? ?? ?????)
to group (any genders): im yesh lakhem emunah (??? ?? ??? ?????)
to group of women only: im yesh lakhen emunah (??? ?? ??? ?????)
It depends on whether "you" refers to a male or a female:
to male: im yesh lekha emunah (××™× ×™×© לך ××ž×•× ×”)
to female: im yesh lakh emunah (××™× ×™×© לך ××ž×•× ×”)
to group (any genders): im yesh lakhem emunah (××™× ×™×© ×œ×›× ××ž×•× ×”)
to group of women only: im yesh lakhen emunah (××™× ×™×© לכן ××ž×•× ×”)
emunah bashem (××ž×•× ×” בש×)
faith = ××ž×•× ×” perseverence = התמדה
emunah bah elohim (××ž×•× ×” באלוקים)
Perhaps it is in the Bible, but by faith alone you know that God works in His time. The Hebrew people were God's chosen ones. They were filled with faith that God would one day free them. God works in mysterious ways no one can understand.
If you mean God's true name, according to the Hebrew scriptures, it is called the Tetragrammaton, and you can only write it in Hebrew. The moment you write it in any other alphabet, it's no longer the name of God. If you mean the word "God", it is: French = Dieu Italian = Dio Spanish = Dios Hebrew = Hashem (ה׳) Apache = Usen
The Hebrew's Jewish faith = Judaism.
Elohim imanu (אלוקים ×¢×ž× ×•)
Benaiah = Benayahu (×‘× ×™×”×•), which means "God has built"
Some write "God." Some write "G-d" (in order to avoid having His name erased). In Hebrew, there are various names for God (see attached Related Link).
Faith in the Hebrew sense in the Old Testament is simply a firm reliance upon God by holding fast to the word of promise, and confidently awaits for its fulfillment even through tribulations. Faith in the New Testament took on a deeper meaning.
Nesichat elohim = × ×¡×™×›×ª אלוקים
אלוהים אוהב אנשים אוהבים.
This is gibberish. I recognize the Christian attempt to write the name of God, but the rest is not Hebrew.