Het Aron is 2 Hebrew words:
Het (חט×, pronounced khet) means mistake
Aron (×רון), means cupboard
aron (ארון)
aron metim (ארון מתים)
Aron (the name) = אהרון
חידו doesn't appear to be a Hebrew word.
Aron comes from the Hebrew name, meaning "Enlightened; to sing
Aron Friemann has written: 'A gazetteer of Hebrew printing' -- subject(s): History, Printing, Gazetteers, Hebrew
Aron (ארון).
aron eekhsun (ארון איחסון)
The word "ark" is of Latin origin; it is not Jewish. The Jewish (Hebrew) name for the place where the Torah is kept is "the Aron Kodesh": the holy Aron. "Aron", whose meaning is similar to "ark", is generally not used in classical Jewish sources to mean anything other than the receptacle for the Torah (or the two Stone Tablets, in Deuteronomy ch.9 and elsewhere). (The Torah-word for the ark of Noah is not "aron", but something else.)
the Aron Kodesh
the letter pe (פ) which has the sound of p or f, depending on where it occurs within a word.
There isn't actually a Hebrew word that literally means the Christian concept of sin. Jewish liturgy uses the word "khet" (חטא) which is an archery term meaning "missing the mark". The Hebrew word which is translated as "Sin" in the English Bible, was "Het" (חטא), which meant to err, or miss the mark. In the Judaic religious sense it meant to fail to to live up to the commandments of God.