Yaluda D'Illaha would be "Child of God". I have no idea where you got frehssia mahidda...
EDIT: (Left the "u" out of Yaluda)
ܒܪ ܐܠܗܐ בר אלהא "bar alaha" or "bar elaha"
The use of the pluperfect ("had been told") is to indicate action occurring earlier than some other action in the past tense. For example: I was told to wait, so I stood there. But: I was standing there because I had been told to wait.
Love child means an illegitimate child. it means someones parents were not married when they had a baby/the love child
Lineal descent is metaphorically in a straight line; a lineal descendant is the child of the child of the child (repeat as necessary) of your own child. It is not the child of your sister, and so forth.
This is the word for "child" in Russian: ребенок
Babylonian/Jerusalem Aramaic: Yaloda or Shabra
The Aramaic word for child is "Yalda" (female) and "Yaldaa" (male).
protected son
ܒܪ ܐܠܗܐ בר אלהא "bar alaha" or "bar elaha"
Isaiah 9:6 in Aramaic is "For a child has been born to us, a son given to us; authority rests upon his shoulders; and he is named Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."
Child has written: 'The mother's book'
Roderick Child has written: 'Claustrophobia'
Margaret Child has written: 'The art of pyrography'
H. Child has written: 'Christian symbols'
Ernest Child has written: 'The tools of the chemist'
Eleanor Weisberger has written: 'When your child needs you' -- subject(s): Child psychology, Child rearing, Parent and child
Christine Child has written: 'Paediatric ward readmission'