Bereisheeth (a.k.a. B'reishis). That's Hebrew for what is otherwise called Genesis.
In the Bible, the name 'Michael' is first mentioned in the book of Daniel, and is from the Hebrew language.
It's the name of a book in the Hebrew Bible, and the name of the female protagonist of that book.
The name Rachel is Hebrew. The first time that I know about it being used is in the Bible, in the book of 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 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'.
Yes; that is the Hebrew name for the book of Exodus.
Enosh is the first son of Seth in the Book of Genesis in the Hebrew Bible.
It depends on how you define "first" and how you define "named after a man".The book of Job, named after the (male) central character, was probably one of the earliest books of the Bible to be written.In the order in which they appear in the modern Bible, the answer would be "Leviticus" (named ... sort of ... after Levi) or Joshua (named, obviously, after Joshua).Since they were originally written in Hebrew, the first book to feature a man's name in the title is Joshua (Hebrew Sefer Y'hoshua). The Hebrew name for Leviticus translates to "and he called", where "he" refers to JHVH; it didn't become "Leviticus" until translated into Greek.
The first book in the Bible was Exodus. The first Name mentioned in the Bible was Adam.
Torah (תורה)
meespareem. (if you are referring to the book of the Bible, it's got a completely different name in Hebrew: "bameedbar")
Lemuel means "belonging to God" in Hebrew. In Hebrew it's spelled למואל. This was the name of a king briefly mentioned in the book of Proverbs in the Bible.