The Chosen One = בחירא (b'hirá)
'The Chosen One' in Aramaic is translated as 'N'tzor' (Χ ΦΈΧ¦ΧΦΉΧ¨).
The word for "chosen" in Aramaic is "buhra."
The Aramaic word for chosen is "mar".
father = אב (av). There is no known Jewish Aramaic word for "daddy." In Modern Hebrew, the Aramaic word abba (אבא) means daddy, but in Aramaic, this word means "the father."
One Aramaic name for father is "Abba." It is a term denoting respect and closeness, similar to the English term "Dad" or "Papa."
You can say friend in Aramaic using the word "re'aya."
The Aramaic word for chosen is "mar".
The word for "chosen" in Aramaic is "buhra."
The persecuted one.
Because she is the Chosen One. And everyone loves the Chosen One. Because the Chosen One is like, the Chosen One, man.
You can say friend in Aramaic using the word "re'aya."
The Aramaic word for light is "Bahro" The above answer is Syriac. The Aramaic word (Jerusalem/Babylon Aramaic) is Nahira.
The Aramaic alphabet is believed to have originated in the 10th century BCE. It was used primarily by the Aramaeans, a Semitic-speaking people in ancient Mesopotamia, and eventually spread to become a common script in the Near East.
The Old Testament with a few exceptions was written in Hebrew. One verse of Jeremiah was written in Aramaic and the last part of Daniel was written in Aramaic. The Apocrypha was written in Aramaic. The New Testament was written in Greek.
ha , tra Chad w'Treyn
Tracy is pronounced the same in Aramaic as it is in English. You can spell it טריסי in Jewish Aramaic.
"Light" in Aramaic is pronounced "nuhra" or "noohra," with the "h" forward in your mouth as opposed to the familiar back-of-the-throat Hebrew pronunciation. To receive a translation of "light" written out in a proper Aramaic script, or to have it translated in a specifc Aramaic dialect (eg Imperial Aramaic or 1st Century Galilean Aramaic), you will want to contact a reputable Aramaic translator.--Aramaic Designs (http://aramaicdesigns.rogueleaf.com/)
There is no word for trinity in classical Aramaic, since the concept didn't exist until after Aramaic ceased to be spoken.In Modern Syriac Aramaic, the word ܬܠܝܬܝܘܬܐ is used.