No. There is no direct relationship between English and Hebrew. In fact, no present-day languages are descended from Hebrew.
No languages descended from Hebrew. But you could say that Biblical Hebrew is the root of Modern Hebrew. Also, Yiddish and other Jewish languages such as Ladino, had a significant percentage of Hebrew.
god i think
Judaism.
Carl is pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.Carl is the same in Hebrew as it is in English
I. Palhan has written: 'Hebrew-English, English-Hebrew dictionary and phrasebook' -- subject(s): English, Hebrew language, Dictionaries, Conversation and phrase books, Hebrew, English language
There is no Hebrew translation for "Jennifer". Only Hebrew names have Hebrew translations. English names do not.
But is not a a Hebrew word. The English word But means אבל (aval) in Hebrew.
The Hebrew word for Jews is Yehudim, not Jew. Like you said, there isnt' a J in Hebrew, but when people translated Hebrew to Latin and English, they turned a lot of Ys in Js. Like the names Jacob and Jesse are written Yaakov and Yishai in Hebrew.
This phrase is not Hebrew or English. If you can tell me what it means in English, then I can translate it into Hebrew for you.
English is much reacher than Hebrew.
The Angles and Saxons.
Shelby is an Old English name. There is no Hebrew equivalent for it.Shelby is an Old English name. There is no Hebrew equivalent for it. But you can spell it using Hebrew letters: שלבי