99.9999999%. Jews have never stopped studying Hebrew, so the only thing that has been lost are the vowels for one single word: the name of God.
No, the book has not been translated to Hebrew.
French translations of the Bible have been translated from Greek and Hebrew into French. English translations have been translated from Greek and Hebrew into English
If you speak English, eat means eat. The Bible has been translated from ancient Hebrew, Aramaic and ancient Greek into many languages and one of those languages is English. And eat means eat.
Based on my research, that book has not yet been translated into Hebrew.
No, as of 2013 it has not been translated into English.
No, the Bible was not translated into Greek. The original texts of the Old Testament were primarily written in Hebrew, while the New Testament was written in Greek. However, there have been translations of the Bible from its original languages into modern Greek for the benefit of Greek-speaking readers.
If Elie Wiesel studied Hebrew, it would have been both Ancient Hebrew and Modern Hebrew.
Scripture that has been translated by Wuest are transliterations and give the text without interpretation but actual wordage.
Well obviously it was written in part Hebrew and part Greek, then later it was translated into Latin and then it would probably have been just publishers who translated it into English in about 1900.
Elohim comes from the Hebrew language and it is translated into english as "The ones who come from the stars". It has been misinterperated as "God" (A divine being)
HebrewAdditional Answer:What is termed the Old Testament was primarily Hebrew with some parts in Aramaic. Termed New Testament was primarily Greek and perhaps some in Hebrew before/afterwards.
A hin is a unit of liquid measure used by the ancient Hebrews, equal to about five liters.