"zah-KEN" or "zah-KAYN"
in reference to an old person = Zaken (feminine is Z'kenah)
in reference to an old object = Yashan (feminine is Yeshanah)
in reference to an old person = Zaken (feminine is Zkena)
in reference to an old object = Yashen (feminine is Yeshena)
The Hebrew word "sceadu" is pronounced "skeh-doo."
old lady = zkĕnah (זקנה)
It is an old Hebrew word meaning "it is finished."
dabar (דַּבָּר) is an old-fashioned Hebrew word for "leader"
No. Path is an English word that comes from Old English "pæth" or "pæþ."There is a Hebrew word paht (פת) which means breadcrumb.
The English word "seven" does not come from Hebrew. It comes from Greek via Old English.
lebab has no meaning in Hebrew, but it's close to levav (לבב) which is an old-fashioned word for "heart."
First, there is no such thing as a "Hebrew Old Testament". But I can tell you're clearly referring to the "Hebrew Bible". Second, the word is She'ol (שאול), which literally means "unknown" or "question". There is no Biblical Hebrew word for hell.
Crazy Old Man in Hebrew is "Ish Zaken Meshuga" - איש זקן משוגע.
No. Sin is not a Hebrew word at all. It is of Old English/Germanic origin. The Hebrew equivavent of the English word "sin" is Khet (חטא) which means "miss" (as in missing a target).
You might be thinking of the New Testament, which was written entirely in Koine Greek.In the Old Testament, there are virtually no Greek words. The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) was written in Hebrew, plus about 250 verses in Aramaic, which is closely related to Hebrew). It contains Hebrew words that were borrowed from Egyptian, Persian, and possibly a few from Greek.The only Greek word I can think of in the entire Hebrew Bible is יָוָן (yavan), which is the Hebrew word for Greece, and comes from the Greek word "Ionia".
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.