There is no form of Hebrew writing that is specifically masculine or feminine. It depends on what you consider feminine. There is only one Hebrew cursive alphabet, but everyone's personal style is different.
It depends entirely on your perception of handwriting, and what you consider to be feminine.
Yes, any Hebrew word can be written in Hebrew script.
hatuna is feminine
all 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet are considered feminine.
Torah already is a Hebrew word written in Latin script. It's pronounced "torah" in Hebrew, just as it is in English, only the stress is on the last syllable.
dollar is masculine in Hebrew (דולר).
Siobhan is the Irish feminine form of the name John. In Hebrew, John is Yochanan (×™×•×—× ×Ÿ). There's no Hebrew feminine form of this name though.
No. In the Hebrew Bible, God is never addressed in the feminine. Note also that in Biblical and rabbinic Hebrew there is no word for "goddess."See also the Related Link.Names of God
נשי nah-SHEE
You (feminine, singular)
The Hebrew alphabet has 22 characters: א ב ×’ ד ×” ו ×– ×— ט ×™ ×› ל מ × ×¡ ×¢ פ צ ×§ ר ש ת
chatat (חטאת) = "you have sinned" (feminine singular)