The Hebrew word beth means house.
The English name Beth is a nickname for Elizabeth, which means "my god is an oath".
That place-name is two words in the original Hebrew.
The name is "BAYT LEH-khem". A close translation is: "House of Bread".
Beth is short for Elizabeth, which is Elisheva (×לישבע) "My God is an oath"
It means "house of..."
It is the construct form of the Hebrew word bah-yeet (בית)
Literally House of (Beth) Bread (lehem).
It is the name of a town in Israel that is still there now. Jesus was born in this town 2024 years ago. In 4BC.
Beit
House
House
Bethlehem already is Hebrew. It's pronounced bet-lekh-em. the KH is a gutteral sound.
Bethlehem is the same in Hebrew as it is in Aramaic: בית־לחם (Beit-Lechem)
You can't actually translate it, but you can write it out in Hebrew letters:Kacey = קייסי
go google translate and translate to Hebrew then click the speak button!!!!!!!!
Pigeon, in Hebrew, is יונה
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.
You can't translate Aldo into hebrew. But you can choose a Hebrew name with a similar sound, such as Alon (אלון) or Adi (עדי)
Clarke doesn't translate to anything in Hebrew. Clark is an Old English name that means "scribe."
Bethlehem in Hebrew literally means "house of bread" which a reference to Virgo, the virgin.
בת.
"Halon" (חלון) in Hebrew is "window."
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