שפרה.
"Shabbat" is the usual spelling in English of the Hebrew word for sabbath.
Shabbat (שבת) is the Hebrew word for ceasing or stopping
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun Shabbos (also Shabbat), the Sabbath or day of rest.
They're called Shabbat candles (Neirot Shabbat in Hebrew).
Shabbat comes from the Hebrew word for sit/rest. Shabbat is the day of rest.
The plural form of "Shabbat" is "Shabbatot" in Hebrew.
There is no Hebrew word for pretzel, but you can spell it phonetically as פרצל. (Israelis often refer to pretzels as "bagels".)
The Sabbath day of rest is called shabbat in Hebrew.
You can't say Happy Friday in Hebrew, but a common greeting on Friday afternoons is Shabbat Shalom (שבת שלום).
Shabbat (Hebrew for 'Sabbath') begins slightly before sunset on Friday afternoon, and ends after twilight on Saturday night.
They're called Shabbat candles (in English); neirot Shabbat (in Hebrew); or Shabbes Licht (in Yiddish).
You don't. You only say Shabbat shalom in Hebrew. If you are asking how French Jews greet each other on Shabbat, they say "Shabbat Shalom"