The name George means "farmer" and there is no Hebrew name with the same meaning. There are also no Hebrew names that sound like George. But a person named George can pick any Hebrew name he wants.If you want to preserve the "OR" sound, you could use the name Lior (לי×ור).
George is the same in Hebrew as it is in English, and it's spelled ג׳ורג׳
There's no such language as Jewish.
If you mean Hebrew, it's "George", spelled ג׳ורג׳
If you mean Yiddish, it's also "George", spelled דזשורדזש
George = ג׳ורג׳
There is no Hebrew name for Frank. You would just call him Frank. You can spell it פראנק
Benjamin is already a Hebrew name. In Hebrew, it would be pronounced been-yah-meen.
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.
Richard Wells is pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
First, Second, Third or Fourth. Or George.
The Hebrew name for a baby boy named after a woman named Esther would be either "Ester" (אסתר) or "Mordecai" (מרדכי), which is the name of Esther's cousin in the Bible.
Probably. It is named after the Prince of Wales during the reign of King George V. A sister ship was named King George V. The Prince of Wales would become Edward VIII.
Die is the Hebrew word for enough.Actually, Die would be translated "Stop"while "Enough" would be maspeek.But it is common to hear someone say, "Die, maspeek!" (Stop, enough!)
If he was attracted to a girl, the name would not matter.
In Hebrew it would be: בהצלחה (behatslacha) In Yiddish it would be: זאָל זײַן מיט גליק (Zol zein mit Glick)
The general answer to either "Salaam Alekem" (Arabic) or "Sholom Aleichem" (Hebrew) is reversing the words. Therefore, in Arabic it would be "Alekem Salaam," while in Hebrew it would be "Aleichem Sholom."
I think he would because he likes that name.