Malaka
The English word "angel" comes from the Greek "angelos." In ancient Greece an angel meant a messenger, either in human form or in supernatural form.
a female given name: from an Aramaic word meaning "listener."
From the Arabic word Sultan, meaning Ruler, power and dominion. Taken from the Aramaic word Shultana meaning 'to have power'
χρυσαφένιος (chrysafenios) is the ancient greek word for Golden
The word 'ancient' is a noun and an adjective.The noun 'ancient' is a word for someone who is very old; a word for someone who lived a long time ago; a word for a person.The adjective 'ancient' is a word used to describe a noun as of or relating to a period of time long past.
The ancient Aramaic word for angel of death is "Malak ha-Mavet." In Aramaic, "Malak" means angel, and "Mavet" means death. This term is commonly used in ancient religious texts and folklore to refer to the angel responsible for carrying out death or judgment.
The ancient Aramaic word for "sister" is "ahotha."
מלאכא - Malaka
Aramaic has no word for zero, since that value does not occur in the Aramaic numeral system, nor in Roman numerals or in ancient Hebrew or in ancient Egyptian.
Malaka would be angel in most dialects of Aramaic.
It's ܚܬܐ Pronounced as "hatho" in Western aramaic and "khatha" in Eastern. The above answer is Syriac. If you are looking for ancient Aramaic, the word would be similar, "Akhotha".
Death = mōt (מות)
so (as in "it is so") = כן (ken)
The ancient Greeks had different words for different types of love, including agape, unconditional or spiritual love. There is no direct translation of this word into English or into ancient Aramaic.
"Name" in Aramaic is "shumi" or "lakab".
The Aramaic word for gold is dahaba.
The Aramaic word for light is "Bahro" The above answer is Syriac. The Aramaic word (Jerusalem/Babylon Aramaic) is Nahira.