Passover always starts on the 15th of Nisan on the Hebrew calendar. It's the same date every year on the Hebrew calendar.
Passover (Pesach in Hebrew), commemorates the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt.
It symbolizes the beginning of The Passover.
Passover is pesach, spelled פסח in both biblical and modern Hebrew.
Passover = Pesach (פסח)
The Hebrew people sprayed blood on the door of their houses in Egypt, and the angel passed by these houses. and the first born escaped. But the egyptians did not have it on their doors so their first born was slain.
Passover is called "Pessa'h" in French. This is not a French word, but comes from Hebrew.
In Hebrew it is: Chag Pesach sameach In English it is: Happy Passover
Jews in Sweden celebrate Passover. The question is complicated by the fact that the name of Passover is Pesach in Hebrew, and this is easily confused with Påsk, the Swedish name for Easter which is pronounced similarly enough that Swedish Jews sometimes have difficulty explaining that no, they are talking about the Jewish festival, a festival that has nothing to do with the resurrection of any messianic figure.
If you are asking what the Hebrew word for "Passover" is, it's pesakh (פסח). If you are asking for the meaning of the holiday, it is a celebration of freedom, commemorating the exodus from Egypt.
Passover always begins on the same date on the Hebrew calendar: the 14th of Nissan.
Passover is always celebrated at the same time on the Hebrew calendar, the 15th of Nisan. However, the Hebrew and Western calendars are not the same so Passover falls on different dates on the Western calendar.