the Torah (תורה)
All English copies of the Hebrew Scriptures are translated from Hebrew to English. These books are always called The Hebrew Bible (or the Tanakh, תנ״ך)Christians refer to these books as "The Old Testament"
The Greek name given to the first five books of the Old Testament is "Pentateuch."
The Hebrew name for the first five books of the Bible is the Torah. It is also called the Chumash (חומש) which is a form of the Hebrew word 'five'.
The Tanakh (also Tenakh, Tenak, Tanach) is a name for the cannon of the Hebrew bible, which became the Old Testament adopted by Christians. The Tanakh includes the written Torah (or Pentateuch) which is the name for the first five books of the Bible.The Septuagint, or simply "LXX", is an Ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible. In time this was referred to as the Greek translation of Old Testament.
The name of the first five books in the old testament are Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy.The first five books in the new testament are Matthew, Mark, Luke , John and Acts.
Torah (תורה)
GenesisExodusLeviticusNumbersDeuteronomyIn Hebrew:Beresheet ShemotVaikraBamidbarDvarimThe first five books of the Jewish scriptures is called the Torah and in Christianity it is known as the Pentateuch.
The Pentateuch.
The Jewish holy book is a set of 24 books called the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh. The Christian translation of these books is called "the Old Testament."These books are mostly in Hebrew, but there are a few chapters that are written in Aramaic.The original is in Hebrew, and it's been translated into almost any languageyou can name. You may even have one around the house. If so, it'll havethe title "The Old Testament".
The first book is Genesis.
In Hebrew, the name Genesis means 'in the beginning' and in the Greek it means 'origin.' Being the first book of the Hebrew Bible and Christian Old Testament, it is appropriately named.
The first five books of the Bible are referred as the "Torah".These first five books (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deutoronomy) form the fundamental history and basis of Judaism, and this is how the term got its name (תּוֹרָה, meaning "teaching", is Hebrew--note that it is written right-to-left).