makom rishon (×ž×§×•× ×¨×שון)
Hebrew has been spoken for many thousands of years prior to the invention of Hebrew writing, so no one knows what the first Hebrew word was. The first Hebrew word in the Bible is "bereshít" (בראשית)
"Makom" (מקום).
the word "genesis" is not a Hebrew word. It is a greek word. If you are asking what the Hebrew word is for the first book of the Bible, it is Bĕrĕshit (בראשית)
Yore. In Hebrew: יורה
The word "Hebrew" comes from the Hebrew word "Avar", which means to cross, or to pass. Abraham crossed the Jordan river on his way the Canaan, and so became the first Hebrew.
English: "In" and Hebrew: bereshith
rishon (ראשון)
m'kom khokhma (מקום חוכמה)
miklat, pronounced "mee-KLAHT"
There is no Hebrew word that means Leviticus. Hebrew names for books of the bible are quite different and unrelated to the English words. The Book of Leviticus in Hebrew is called vayikra (ויקרא), which comes from the first word of the book of Leviticus.
There is no Hebrew word for relocate. You would just decribe it as: avar lemakom chadash (עבר למקום חדש) = "to move to a new place"
Yes, however, as the Tanach was first written in Hebrew and Aramaic, it appears in the Hebrew form of 'Yehud'.