If you are responding to "Thank you," you would say bevakasha (בבקשה) to anyone.
If you are indicating that someone is welcome [in your home, etc.], you would say brucha haba'a (ברוכה הבאה) to a female.
Typically the correct wording would be 'welcome' but it depends on whether your felt welcomed or welcome.
"What if your Welcome" cannot be translated into Hebrew, because "your welcome" in Hebrew is literally "blessed is he/she who comes" You can say, "what if it happens that you are permitted to enter" = ma yikreh im mutar lekha/lakh lehikanes.
The Hebrew word for female means female
welcome in Hebrew is "baroch haba" or "shalom" or "brocim habaim"
The same way all Hebrew-speaking Jews say welcome. It depends on who you are welcoming: said to a male: baruch haba (ברוך הבא) said to a female: brucha haba'a (ברוכה הבאה) said to a group: bruchim haba'im (ברוכים הבאים) It literally means "blessed [is] he/she who comes" or "blessed [are] those who come"
If you're asking how to say "female" in Hebrew, it's nekevá (× ×§×‘×”)
brukhim haba'im le'amritsar
If you are saying it to a male: baruch ha-ba la-olam (ברוך הבא לעולם) If you are saying it to a female: brucha ha-ba'a la-olam (ברוכה הבאה לעולם)
Old Testament was written in Hebrew, the new was written in Greek
female warriors = lochmót (לוחמות)
female artist = omanit (אמנית)
Guns 'n' Roses sung "Welcome to the Jungle"