No, Hebrew is not Russian. The two languages are not related.
belka in Russian
Israel has Hebrew as its chief language. (Arabic, English and Russian are widespread, but Hebrew is the major language.) See also:More about Israel
Russian, Greek, Hebrew, Chinese, etc...
Hebrew: מה שלא הורג- מחשל ma shelo horeg-mekhashel
No. The Ancient Hebrews spoke Hebrew.
26 in mine. More in Hebrew. More in Russian
Ivan is the Russian name for "John". In Hebrew, John is Yokhanan (×™×•×—× ×Ÿ) which means "God is kind".
Nadine comes from a Russian name that means "hope." In Hebrew, a name with the same meaning would be Tikva (תקווה)
The male given name may be Uri (from Hebrew), or Yuri (from Russian).
The name Lena has no meaning in Hebrew. Only Hebrew names have meaning in Hebrew. Lena is a Scandinavian, German and Polish short form of HELENA or MAGDALENA, and a Russian short form of YELENA, so it has meaning only in those languages.
The major language in Israel is Hebrew, followed by Arabic, English, and Russian.
Hebrew is a phonetically simple language. Click Here to see a you-tube clip in Hebrew, where Israelis try Russian food for the first time.