The Lulav (לולב)
The Shofar (שופר)
There is no such thing as a Jewish baptism.
1. Babylonian Talmud 2. Jerusalem Talmud
It may be a Jewish name, if it is used by a Jewish family. If used by a non-Jewish family, then it is not a Jewish name. Virtually all names used by Jewish families are also non-Jewish names.
Jewish star is my guess.
unlikely. Slavic names ending in "i" are rarely Jewish names.
The symbols are universal and the names are different in each language
Two metalloids with symbols not based on English names are antimony (Sb) and germanium (Ge). Their symbols are derived from their Latin names: stibium for antimony and germania for germanium.
The symbols found on the Jewish Dreidel can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreidel
A Jewish person may have almost any name possible, but there are no names that are traditionally both Scottish and Jewish.
Because in the English Bible the disciples names are a translation of their Jewish name or possibly a transliteration of their Jewish names. For example Simon is English for the Jewish name Shimon and John is the English equivalent of Jochanan
some elements do not use their first letters of their English names as their symbols. The symbols for these elements may come from the names of the elements in a different language.
Most Filipinos are Christian, and use biblical names. If the names came from the Hebrew Bible, they would very likely be Jewish names.