There were many Hebrew prophets.
Here is a partial list:
(יהושע / Y'hoshua) - Joshua
(שמואל / Sh'muel) - Samuel
(ישעיה / Y'shayahu) - Isaiah
(ירמיה / Yir'mi'yahu) - Jeremiah
(יחזקאל / Y'khezqel) - Ezekiel
(הושע / Hoshea) - Hosea
(יואל / Yo'el) - Joel
(עמוס / Amos) - Amos
(עובדיה / Ovadyah) - Obadiah
(יונה / Yonah) - Jonah
(מיכה / Mikhah) - Micah
(נחום / Nakhum) - Nahum
(חבקוק /Havakuk) - Habakkuk
(צפניה / Ts'phanyah) - Zephaniah
(חגי / Khagai) - Haggai
(זכריה / Z'kharyah) - Zechariah
(מלאכי / Mal'akhi) - Malachi
Yes, in fact all of the prophets of the Hebrew scriptures are regularly quoted.
Yes they are.
The Hebrew Scriptures only have 3 sections: Torah (תורה), Nevi'im or Prophets (× ×‘×™××™×), and Ktuvim or Writings (כתובים)
Torah Nevi'im (prophets) Ketuvim (prophetic writings)
Torah - Pentatuch Nevi'im - Prophets Kusuvim - Writings
There are only 3 categories:Torah (תורה)Prophets (נביאיםּ)Writings (כתובים)
"Prophets" is written in Hebrew as "נביאים".
prophet = nah-VEE (נביא) the prophet = "hah-nah-VEE" (הנביא)
Islam teaches that Jesus was a real, historical person but does not accept all his teachings or the Christian view that Jesus was the Son of God. In fact, Islam is largely based on an interpretation of the Christian Bible and Hebrew scriptures, so the Hebrew prophets have a place in Islam as well.
I think that by Hebrew Scriptures you mean the Tanakh. In this case, it is Biblical Hebrew
The Hebrew scriptures are written in Hebrew (only a few passages are written in Aramaic).
The Jewish Bible is called the Tanach. The word Tanach is an acronym made up of its three parts: Torah (Teachings), Nevi'im (Prophets), and K'tuvim (Writings).