No, although many people believe this is true, Muhammad is not mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.
Some people attempt to interpret certain verses as referring to Muhammad, but people have also done that with Jesus, Buddha, Hitler, and Barack Obama. It's all just a matter of interpretation and belief.
Some of the verses that Muslims use to place prophesies concerning Mohammed are so ambiguous or misconstrued from their original context, that it becomes a square-peg-round-hole situation.
Yes, in fact all of the prophets of the Hebrew scriptures are regularly quoted.
he was a prophet
There is no significance of the Roman Empire in the Hebrew Scriptures. The Romans are not even mentioned.
According to the Hebrew Scriptures it was the Prophet Hosea whose wife was unfaithful to him.
AnswerThe Egyptian writings never mentioned the Hebrew scriptures.
prophet = nah-VEE (נביא) the prophet = "hah-nah-VEE" (הנביא)
In Islam, Jesus is considered to be a prophet, Mohammed being his immediate successor.
If you mean the Hebrew scriptures, then 2 are definetly mentioned - Michael and Gabriel. The Latin translation for a third - Lucifer - is also noted.
I think that by Hebrew Scriptures you mean the Tanakh. In this case, it is Biblical Hebrew
The Hebrew scriptures are written in Hebrew (only a few passages are written in Aramaic).
There is no Hebrew prophet named Moham.
AnswerThe Septuagint ('LXX') was the earliest Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures.