In Hebrew, "grandma" is pronounced as "Savta" (סבתא).
savta (סבתא)
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."
Hebrew: savta (סבתא)Yiddish: Bubbeh or Baba (בובע)
Grandmother or grandma = savta (סבתא) Grandfather or grandpa = sabba (סבא)
grandmother/grandma = סבה (savá)the grandmother = סבתא (sávta)Note: the word savta, which means "the grandmother" was borrowed into Modern Hebrew as "grandma" to distinguish it from sava (grandmother). There is no such distinction in Aramaic.
if you are talking to the grandma: la-nekhed shelakhif you are talking the grandpa: la-nekhed shelkha
There are dozens of Jewish languages. Here is Grandma in a few:Hebrew = savta (סבתא)Yiddish = Bubbe (בובע)Ladino = nonna, avuelaJewish Aramaic = savta (סבתא)
If you are talking about a slang word for grandma, its: savta (סבתא) If you are talking about the word "nanny", it's: metapelet (מטפלת)
Only if your intention is to call her "mom". Otherwise, the correct way to address your grandmother is "savta" (סבתא)
To Grandma
The possessive form of the singular noun grandma is grandma's.Example: I brought flowers for grandma's birthday.