The oldest complete copy of the Old Testament is the Codex Leningradensis, dated about 1010 CE. Another mostly complete copy is the Septuagint, which is a Greek translation from about 247 to 117 BCE. Then The Masoretic Texts are dated circa 500-1000 CE.
מורה This is what "teacher" is in the Hebrew manuscript.
Semadar Shir has written: 'The complete book of Hebrew babynames' -- subject(s): Hebrew, Jewish, Names, Personal, Personal Names
William L. Roy has written: 'A complete Hebrew and English critical and pronouncing dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Hebrew, Hebrew language
Through Torah-study and teaching, and through maintaining manuscript copies.
Abraham Isaac Katsh has written: 'The Antonin genizah in the Saltykov-Schedrin Public Library in Leningrad' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Manuscripts, Hebrew, Genizah, Hebrew Manuscripts 'Catalogue of Hebrew manuscripts preserved in the USSR' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Manuscripts, Hebrew, Manuscripts on microfilm, Facsimiles, Cairo Genizah, Hebrew Manuscripts 'Judaism in Islam' 'Hebrew in American higher education' -- subject(s): Civilization, Comparative Literature, English and Hebrew, Hebrew and English, Hebrew language, Hebrew literature, Jews, Literature, Comparative, Study and teaching, Universities and colleges 'Bar Mitzvah illustrated' -- subject(s): Bar mitzvah, Judaism 'Hebrew language' -- subject(s): Study and teaching, Hebrew philology 'Hebrew and Judeo-Arabic MSS in the collections of the USSR'
There is no Hebrew written within the Dome of the Rock.
I think that by Hebrew Scriptures you mean the Tanakh. In this case, it is Biblical Hebrew
The Hebrew word "tachlit" is written like this: "תכלית".
Hebrew is famous as the language in which The Bible was originally written.
The Hebrew scriptures are written in Hebrew (only a few passages are written in Aramaic).
The book of Psalms was originally written in Hebrew.
AnswerGreek is written from left to right. Hebrew is written from right to left.