chai (חי) = alive or living
Note: Many English-speaking Jews think this word means "life" but it's actually an adjective. Life is chayim (חיים).
-- Chai (or Khai) is the Hebrew word for 'Life'. -- Chai is another word for tea. It is used in many different cultures and is derived from a Chinese word.
"Life", "living", or "alive", depending on the context.
It means "Alive".
The word for "life" in Hebrew is "chai." The two Hebrew letters that make up the word "chai" are chet and yud. The letters have numerical value. The chai is equivalent to 8 and yud is equivalent to 10. So "chai", chet and yud added together, equals 18. Any multiple of 18, ie 18, 36, 54, etc. can be a chai number.
'Chai' isn't a word in Japanese. If you mean 'cha' it means 'tea'. It might be you mean it as a name, written 茶衣 /chai/.
Finished work
Alive is pronounced "chai". In Hebrew alphabet, it is: חַי
The reason $18.00, or a multiple of 18 is so often given is because in Judaism, 18 is a very significant number. 18 means "Chai", in Hebrew, which in English, means "Life". Hope this helps! Clarification: In Hebrew, each letter of the alphabet has a numerical value. The letters that make up the word 'chai', which means life, have the value of 18. 18 doesn't actually mean 'chai'.
double chai means double life. it is represented by the number 36.
Sydney is not a Hebrew word. It has no meaning in Hebrew.
diestra has no meaning in Hebrew. This is not a Hebrew word.
Chai (חי) means "alive" Chayyim (חיים) means "life"