No. The books of the Hebrew Bible were written almost entirely in Hebrew. Only a few verses were written in Aramaic.
Quote from the Related Link: "Aramaic is a Semitic language with a 3,000-year history. It has been the language of administration of empires and the language of divine worship. It is the original language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Jerusalem Talmud and also of the Babylonian Talmud. Aramaic was one of the languages of Jesus (see Aramaic of Jesus)(see Hebrew of Jesus). Modern Aramaic is spoken today as a first language by numerous, scattered communities, most significantly by the Assyrians and Aramean-Syriac people. The language is considered to be endangered."
A:The language spoken by Palestinian Jews in the first century was Aramaic, so the apostle John would have spoken Aramaic.
Aramaic is a Semitic language that originated in the Near East and was commonly spoken in ancient times. It is not the same as English, which belongs to the Germanic language family. English developed from a mixture of languages, including Old English, Latin, and French, and its origins trace back to the 5th century.
The Christian Bible is written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.
The Old Testament was written mostly in Aramaic and Hebrew. The New Testament was written mostly in Greek. There are no original texts, but a huge number of very early texts, so, though we can not absolutely prove the original language, it is extremely unlikely that the originals were written in anything other than Greek, Aramaic and Hebrew.
In the Bible, or in His whole life? Obviously the second is impossible to know, and the first you can look up on a Bible website, but it depends what version you are looking at. The most accurate would have to be a Bible in the same language that Jesus spoke. That would have been Hebrew and Aramaic.
Yes, however, as the Tanach was first written in Hebrew and Aramaic, it appears in the Hebrew form of 'Yehud'.
The name Tabatha is of Aramaic origin and means "gazelle" or "beauty." It is also derived from the Aramaic word "tabya," which means gazelle.
One thought:I can provide a partial answer...The Bible was written originally in Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek, and there were already many handwritten copies in these languages and certain Egyptian dialects in existence by the 3rd century. The Wycliffe Bible in 1380 was the first complete handwritten Bible in the English . The first printed Bible, the Gutenberg Bible, came out in 1456, in Latin.
The Bible was written for the uneducated and meant to be read aloud. It was more than likely first written in Aramaic, the language Jesus spoke when he taught and later it would be translated in Greek and Latin.
The name of the first Spanish language Bible is "Biblia del Oso" (Bear Bible) and was translated by Casiodoro de Reina in 1569.
St. Jerome first translated the Bible and it was into Latin.