talking about a male: zichronó livracha (×–×›×¨×•× ×• לברכה)
talking about a female: zichroná livracha (×–×›×¨×•× ×” לברכה)
talking about a group: zichronám livracha (×–×›×¨×•× × ×œ×‘×¨×›×”)
In Hebrew, this phrase would follow the person's name, and doesn't translate literally. It also depends on the gender of the person being remembered: for a male: zichrono livracha (×–×›×¨×•× ×• לברכה) for a female: zichrona livracha (×–×›×¨×•× ×” לברכה) for example: In memory of John Lennon = John Lennon, zichrono livracha. It literally means "may his/her memory be a blessing."
If you are speaking of a deceased person, you would say zichrona livracha ("may her memory be a blessing"). Otherwise, there's no concept of blessing souls in Judaism, so this phrase would not be used.
There isn't an exact Hebrew translation for "soul". Also, if you're talking about a dead person, Hebrew speakers would say something completely different: talking about a living person: sheh yihyeh la shalom (שיהיה לה שלום), "may she have peace". talking about a dead person: zikhroná livrakhá (×–×›×¨×•× ×” לברכה), "may her memory be a blessing".
This phrase wouldn't sound right if translated literally. When someone dies, the proper thing to say is zichrono livracha (×–×›×¨×•× ×• לברכה), literally, "may his memory be a blessing."
You may keep memory allocated if you do not and that may cause applications to write to forbidden areas of memory causing a crash.
A priest typically says "May God bless you" or "May the Lord be with you" when giving a blessing.
The short answer is No a blessing cannot be washed off. A blessing is a not a physical object although a blessing may involve the use of physical items such as water.
May be you need gods blessing all the time, we all need it.
"May lee" is not a Hebrew name.
In what type of memory is data only written once?
It means that something that seems bad on the surface may turn out to be good. Losing a job may be a blessing in disguise if it leads you to get a better one.
The Shema prayer is said. Actually the dying person is the one who is supposed to say it. If you mean what do you say to a family who has lost a loved one, the traditional thing to say is "may his/her memory be as a blessing".