Grandmother in Hebrew = Savah (סבה) in both languages.Note:The confusion lies in the word Savta (סבתא). In Aramaic, Savta means "The Grandmother" and in Hebrew it means "Grandma."
"Michael" is a name that comes to us FROM Hebrew. Although the typical modern pronunciation is "MY-kl",the spelling accurately conveys the original Hebrew pronunciation "MEE-kah-EL".Michael - Hebrew: "Who is like God?"
dawyne has no meaning in Hebrew. But if you can provide the exact pronunciation of this name, I can show you how to write it using Hebrew letters.
The name Gina can't be translated into Hebrew, but it can be written out phonetically as ×’×³×™× ×” which has the same pronunciation as in English.
The name "Jesus" is not a pagan name or a Greek name. It is the Greek pronunciation of a Hebrew name.
The name "Ruth" is a word that came directly from Hebrew with very little change. The Hebrew pronunciation is "ROOS" for Ashkenazic Hebrew speakers, and "ROOT" for Sephardic Hebrew speakers.
Grandmother = Savta (סבתא) Grandfather = Saba (סבא) But there's no word that means "Grandparent" or "Grandparents"
YHVH is how it appears in the Hebrew Bible. But we do not know what the vowels are, and Jewish custom forbids the pronunciation of the name. When speaking Hebrew you would say "el" which is short for "elohim".
There is a Hebrew name, Eden, which in its Hebrew pronunciation ("Eyden") sounds like Aidan. It is important to note, however, that Aiden is a name of Scottish origin and thus has not Hebrew corollary as opposed to Jacob, Joshua or Michelle.
The pronunciation differs. In Israel, there is the Biblical "Yonatan", but there is also the "Yehonatan" which is the long traditional way, and then the informal or friendly pronunciation of "Yani".
Paul's Hebrew name was pronounced shah-ool (שאול) in Hebrew. Since there is no sh sound in Greek, the Greeks would have pronounced it Sa'ool, which later became Anglicized as Saul.
Uriah is one of those names that comes to us FROM Hebrew, by way of King James.Its English spelling hints at its Hebrew pronunciation: "oo-REE-ah"