You can't because there is no such thing. It wouldn't make any sense to translate the original Hebrew text into King James English, and then back to a new Hebrew translation. The result would not be accurate.
Just read The Bible in it's original Biblical Hebrew, as it was meant to be read. Any Jewish bookstore will sell Bibles in the original Hebrew.
Yes, but technically it wouldn't be a "version" since the Bible was written in Hebrew. It would be called the original.
Virtually all Jewish bookstores sell copies of the Bible in both the original Hebrew and its translation. There are also several good editions on Amazon.
You can't because there is no such thing. It wouldn't make any sense to translate the original Hebrew text into King James English, and then back to a new Hebrew translation. The result would not be accurate.
Just read the Bible in it's original Biblical Hebrew, as it was meant to be read. Any Jewish bookstore will sell Bibles in the original Hebrew.
If you are asking for a side-by-side version, with Hebrew on one side, and KJV English on the other, this also doesn't exist, because Jews do not regard the KJV as accurate enough.
Yes. An excellent choice is The Living Torah, translated and annotated by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan; and The Living Nach. Another good choice is the Artscroll series.
St. Jerome translated the bible from Greek and Hebrew into Latin. The translated version is called the Latin Vulgate.
There are several versions that use transliterations of the the original Hebrew names in the KJV. The Restored Name King James Version and the Sacred Name Bible are both available online: http://www.sacrednamebible.com/
Septuagint, the Greek version of the Hebrew Bible. It was the basis for Jerome's Latin translation of the Bible.
The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.
Jewish scholars in Alexandria translated the Hebrew Bible into Greek, a version known as the Septuagint.
No. It was never put in in the Hebrew literature.
a translation is taking the Hebrew or Greek and translating it into the language the person wants. a version is the name placed on it by the translators
It was compiled quite a bit before the 4th century, but that is the oldest surviving copy. The "Tanakh", which is the Hebrew Bible is the original version and our modern Bible is based on that.
King James Version New International Version Revised Standard Version The Living Bible New Living Translation World English Bible New King James Version New International Readers Editions American Standard Version New American Standard Version Young's Literal Translation Plain English Bible New English Bible Amplified Bible Basic English Bible Translator's NT 20th Century Bible Modern King James Version The Message New Jerusalem Bible Hebrew Names Version of World English Bible Contemporary English Version English Version for the Death Good News Version New Century Version New Revised Standard Version J. B. Phillips New Testament, modern English
The Hebrews wrote the Hebrew Bible. A Christianized version of these writings is called "The Old Testament".
Search Strong's Bible ConcordanceA Strong's Concordance of the Bible is an excellant source to study Hebrew names of people and places. It can be available freethrough some internet searches.
Nowhere Yahweh is a Hebrew word for God, the covenant God of Israel. He is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It is Hebrew and The King James Version of the Bible is not written in Hebrew or Greek, it is written in English. So the Hebrew name Yahweh or most other Hebrew words will probably not be seen in an English written Bible. The English translations of Jahweh occurs well over 6000 times in the KJV Bible.