Benjamin is already a Hebrew name. In Hebrew, it would be pronounced been-yah-meen.
Ben is a nickname for Benjamin, which is already a Hebrew name. In Hebrew it's pronounced Binyamin, and it's spelled ×‘× ×™×ž×™×Ÿ
'Benjamin' is a Hebrew name, found in the Bible (see Genesis 35:16) and pronounced "BEEN-ya-MEEN". 'Robert' is not a Hebrew name.
"Benny" or "Ben" comes from "Benjamin" (Hebrew: Binyamin, בנימין), and Benjamin is a Jewish name.
Jacob called his son Benjamin because Rachel, his mother, named him "Ben-Oni" which means "son of my sorrow" before she died in childbirth. Jacob changed his name to Benjamin, meaning "son of my right hand", to honor Rachel and show his love and favor for his youngest son.
Yes, Ben is a nickname of Benjamin, which is a Hebrew name. In Hebrew it is Binyamin (בנימין), meaning "son of the right hand."
There is no Hebrew verson of the name "Frances". Her hebrew name can be anything you want. Many Jewish women named Frances have the Hebrew name P'nina (×¤× ×™× ×”) but this is just a tradition; the names P'nina and Frances are not related.
Benny is a variation on the name Benjamin, a Hebrew name meaning "Son of My Right Hand".
There are many Muslim girls/ females named Aaliyah. similar names Alya, Aliyah might be spelled Aaliyah. I have cousins named Alya, and Aliyah(AALIYAH).
If you want to go by meaning: Shoshana (×©×•×©× ×”) If you want to go by sound: leah (לאה)
There is no Hebrew name for Raymond. People named Raymond usually choose unrelated Hebrew names with similar sounds, such as Ra'am or Ra'anan.
Macey has no meaning in Hebrew. Only Hebrew names have meaning in Hebrew.(The name Macey comes from an English surname which was from various towns named Massy in France. The towns themselves were originally named from a Gallo-Roman personal name that was Latinized as Maccius.)
Richard Wells is pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.