Dalet (ד)
In Hebrew, the name "Dianna" can be translated as דִּיאָנָה (pronounced dee-ah-nah). The Hebrew alphabet does not have the letter "D," so the sound is represented by the letter "ד" which makes a "d" sound. The vowels in Hebrew are typically not written, so the "i" sound in "Dianna" is represented by the letter "י" which makes an "ee" sound. The final "a" sound is represented by the letter "ה" which makes an "ah" sound.
The letter tav (ת), the last letter of the Hebrew alphabet, has a "t" sound.
There is no h in the Hebrew alphabet, but there is the letter "heh" or "hey" (×”) which has a similar sound. the letter ×” has the numerical value of 5 in addition to the sound of "h".
There is no "letter k" in the Hebrew alphabet. But there are 2 Hebrew letters that have the same sound as the English letter k: they are ×› and ×§.
There is a Hebrew letter with the sound of Z. It's called zayyin (×–).
The Hebrew word "dod" is pronounced as /dod/ with a short "o" sound like in "hot" and a hard "d" sound. The stress is on the first syllable, so it is pronounced as "dod" with equal emphasis on each syllable. In Hebrew, the letter "o" is typically pronounced as a short vowel sound.
Mem is a Hebrew letter with the sound of M. it is written מat the end of a word, it is written ם
gimel (ג) has a hard g sound.
The letter Z has no meaning in Hebrew, since Hebrew uses a completely different alphabet. The 7th letter of the Hebrew alphabet is Zayin (×–) which has the same sound as the English letter Z.
There is no such thing as a Jewish alphabet. If you mean Hebrew, there is no letter for J in Hebrew. In Modern Hebrew, words with the "J" sound are written with the letter for g plus an apostrophe: ג׳
Depends what translation/language you are using. Greek and Hebrew don't have the letter "D".
There is no h in the Hebrew alphabet, but there is the letter "heh" or "hey" (×”) which has a similar sound. the letter ×” has the numerical value of 5 in addition to the sound of "h".