Matthew is not a Hebrew name, but Hebrew copies of the New Testament render it as Mah-TAH-ee (מתי).
The Gospel of Matthew was likely written in Greek, not Hebrew.
Probably not. In Matthew's time, Hebrew was only used for Jewish religious purposes, and was no longer spoken as a common language. If Matthew did write in Hebrew, nothing survived to this day.
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you meant Hebrew, it's mah-tai (מתי)
In Hebrew, Matthew means "gift of the Lord."
There is no Hebrew word for either "gospel" or Matthew". The closest Hebrew can come is (using the Greek name for Matthew): "the Christian greetings of Matthew" = besorat natzrut matai. ????? ????? ???
Hebrew doesn't have symbols. It just has ordinary letters and words. The word for Matthew is מתי (pronounced Metai)
The name Matthew is of Greek origin and has no meaning in Hebrew. It can be spelled phonetically as either "מתיו" or "מת'יו".
In Matthew's time, Hebrew was not used as a spoken language. It was only used by Jews in prayer and other religious situations.
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew
Matthew: [Meaning] God's GiftGender: MaleOrigin: Hebrew:) Hope this was what you're looking for.
Has in Hebrew is: YESH
It sounds like a diminutive for Madison or Madeleine.Madison means "son of Matthew" and Matthew is Hebrew for "gift from the Lord".Madeleine is a French name from a Hebrew root meaning "from the mountain".