If you're asking for the Hebrew word for rib, it's tsela (צלע).
If you're asking for the Hebrew phrase "Adam's rib", it's tsela shel ha-adahm ha-rishon (צלע של ×”××“× ×”×¨×שון). Literally, "the rib of the first person".
Note: the first person mentioned in the Bible doesn't actually have a name. The Hebrew word "adam" means "person". Christian translators chose to use this word as his name.
There is no verse in the KJV translation with the phrase "created he a woman," however, the verb used for "create" throughout the book of Genesis is bará (ברא)
Woman = eesha (אשה)Women = Nasheem (נשים)"Woman" in Hebrew is "ee-SHAH" - אישה.
the possessive form in Hebrew is just the word shel (של) which means "of". woman's ( or 'of woman') = shel eeshah (של אישה)
Greek = Anthropótita (Ανθρωπότητα)Hebrew = Adam (אדם)
rabbi = רב (pronounced Rav)The Hebrew word for Rabbi is rahv (רב) which means "master".The English word Rabbi actually comes from the Hebrew word rahbi (רבי) which means "my master".TeacherRav is Rabbi in HebrewThe Hebrew word for rabbi is rahv (רב)
eeshah (אשה) is the Hebrew word for woman. It's simply the word for man (eesh, איש) with the femine suffix -ah (־ה) attached. The word can also be translated as wife.
שיקסע
The Hebrew word for woman is ish-shah', which lliterally means a "female man" and implies that 'woman was taken from man' (Genesis 2:22-23)
to a woman: she-tehyeh lach emunah to a man: she tehyeh lecha emunah
The Hebrew word bara means "created."
"Ishah" is the Hebrew word for "woman" or "wife." It is often used in Jewish texts to refer to a woman in a formal or respectful manner.
to a man: atah yafeh (אתה יפה) to a woman: at yafah (את יפה)