Passover is pesach, spelled פסח in both biblical and modern Hebrew.
Pesach ba (פסח בא)
Jane is spelled ג׳יין in Modern Hebrew. There is no way to write Jane in Biblical Hebrew because Biblical Hebrew has no J. You could spell it יין, pronounced Yane, but it looks like the Hebrew word for wine, pronounced Yayin.
Biblical Aramaic uses the Hebrew alphabet, so it would be מגן דוד
Passover = Pesach (פסח)
In Hebrew it is: Chag Pesach sameach In English it is: Happy Passover
Passover is called "Pessa'h" in French. This is not a French word, but comes from Hebrew.
On passover you are not allowed to write. You can definitely write about passover (assuming you don't do it over the holiday)!
Modern Aramaic is written with the syriac alphabet and (Jewish) Biblical Aramaic is written with the Hebrew alphabet. In Biblical Aramaic, it's מיכאל
sister = achót (אחות)it's the same word in both Biblical Hebrew and Modern Hebrew.
Passover always starts on the 15th of Nisan on the Hebrew calendar. It's the same date every year on the Hebrew calendar.
Modern Aramaic is written with the syriac alphabet and (Jewish) Biblical Aramaic is written with the Hebrew alphabet. In Biblical Aramaic, it's ליזי
If you are asking what the Hebrew word for "Passover" is, it's pesakh (פסח). If you are asking for the meaning of the holiday, it is a celebration of freedom, commemorating the exodus from Egypt.