It depends on whether you're talking to a male, a female, or a group:
masculine singular = atah tsarich la'avodFe
feminine singular = aht tsrichah la'avod
masculine plural = atem tsrichim la'avod
feminine plural = aten tsrichot la'avod
Kind of depends on the context, but 'Nifla' is one way to say lovely in Hebrew. Another way is to just say that something is "Ya-feh"
anakhnu tsrikhim hora'ot
You can say "slee-KHA".Literally, something like "excuse ! ?" or "forgive ! ?"
"Masheh-hu Tzatz" (משהו צץ).
to give back (or to return something) = hekhzir (החזיר)
You need the rest of the sentwence to translate this, but it would be something like: haderekh bein _________ uvein _________. (you fill in the blanks with the 2 things the path is between.)
You would need the rest of the sentence in order to translate that.
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew
to change something = sheenah (×©×™× ×”) to swap something for another thing = hekhleef (החליף)
you would say if you need help for something
Has in Hebrew is: YESH
There is no such thing as aying something in 'Jewish'. You can say something in Yiddish or Hebrew, but not 'Jewish'. The hebrew translation for cute baby is:תינוק חמוד (teenoke Chamode). The Yiddish translation for cute baby is: eyfel zis (I-fell Zees). Hope this is helpful!