bet lekhem (בית לחם)
If it's regular bread, you call it 'Pão' (puhoh). If it's corn bread, then you call it 'Broa' (browa).
The House of The Lord is a HOLY place where The Almighty dwells. If you are asking how to say this in Hebrew, it is: בית השם = beit hashem
Americans usually call a house "a house", sometimes "real estate".
Progressive Jews tend to refer to God in their native languages as opposed to Hebrew (unless Hebrew is their native language).
They did not, it comes from the Hebrew - Sulfur is referenced in the Bible as brimstone.
House of bread = beit lechem (בית לחם)
It's the literal translation of the Hebrew. Beth=house and lehem=bread.
In Hebrew, it means 'House of bread'.
The word bethlehem is from the Hebrew beth lechemwhich means either house of bread or house of [the god] Lahm. from Modern Catholic Dictionary by John A. Hardon, S.J. Doubleday & Co., Inc. Garden City, NY 1980
Beth-lechem [ בֵּית לָחֶם] is Hebrew for House of Bread [or food].
It's from a Biblical placename, Bethany. "Beth" in Hebrew means "house" as in "Bethel" ("house of God") and "Bethlehem" ("house of bread"). "Bethany" means "house of figs".
In Hebrew, it's Beit Lechem...House of Bread. Since Bethlehem is in Judea, and Hebrew was the lingua franca, that would be the way it's written.
Bethlehem in Hebrew literally means "house of bread" which a reference to Virgo, the virgin.
The Hebrew word beth means house. The English name Beth is a nickname for Elizabeth, which means "my god is an oath".
Bethelhem is a variant spelling of Bethlehem, a city in the West Bank known for being the birthplace of Jesus Christ according to Christian tradition. The name Bethlehem is of Hebrew origin and means "house of bread."
There is no Hebrew word for pretzel, but you can spell it phonetically as פרצל. (Israelis often refer to pretzels as "bagels".)
lekhem (לחם)