shur (שור) is an archaic Hebrew word for "wall"
There is no native Hebrew word for fairy. Modern Hebrew uses the word feya (פֵיָה), which is borrowed from the archaic English word "fey."
Archaic dialect or South African a rogue
Havli is an archaic word for 'useless' but there is no such word as habli.
Broider is not a real word (except as an archaic word), so it has no meaning in Hebrew. If you mean "embroider" then it is רקם (rah-KAHM).
Broided, an archaic form of the word braided = קלוע (kalua')
The archaic Hebrew Alefbet is older, and not very different from the Phoenician Alefbet which developed at about the same time. The modern square Hebrew dates to the Babylonian Captivity, the letters are the same as the archaic ones. The Greeks seem to have gotten the idea of an alphabet from the Phoenicians, and went on to improve it by making some letters into real vowels.
ho (archaic interjection) = ho (הו) or hoy (הוי) ho (slang for whore) = zonah (×–×•× ×”)
Yea as in the archaic word for "truly" = be'emet (באמת) Yea as in a variation of "yes" = ken (כן)
The meaning of borah depends on how you spell it in Hebrew:בּוֹרְאָה = female creatorבּוֹרָהּ = her cistern, her pitבּוֹרָה = she eats (archaic)בֹּרָא = to be deforested
AnswerThe Hebrew people of the eleventh century BCE spoke an archaic form of Hebrew, itself a West Semitic language similar to that of the Canaanites. Many scholars doubt whether Samuel was a real, historical person, but assuming that he really did exist, he would have spoken Hebrew.
Maybe he doesn't speak Hebrew.