The Egyptians did not have a symbol for the Hebrew God. They only wrote about the Hebrews in one place, and didn't mention their God.
The name of the Egyptian's god of baboons is Babi.
The name of the Egyptian's god of creation is Ptah.
Yah is not a recognized Egyptian god in ancient Egyptian mythology. It is possible that you may be referring to Yahweh, the god of the Israelites in the Hebrew Bible. In ancient Egyptian mythology, the god Yahweh does not hold any significance.
God was involved, Moses' Hebrew brother Aaron, his Hebrew sister Miriam, and his Hebrew mother Yochebed, Pharaoh (his Egyptian father), his Egyptian mother (Pharaoh's wife - name is not mentioned, Rameses (his Egyptian brother) Tzipporah (his wife) Moses's 2 children (boys) Jethro (his father in - law)
The name of the Egyptian's goose god is Gengen-Wer.
There is no Egyptian god of wheat, however there is an Egyptian god of grain. The name of this god was 'Neper'. He was sometimes called 'Neper the reaper' because of his association with grain and harvesting.
Ra is the egyptian god of the sun.
The name of Egyptian's god of scarab beetless is Khepri.
Maribel is a Hispanic name formed by the contraction of Maria and Isabel. Maria comes from the Ancient Egyptian name Miriam (via Hebrew) with an unknown meaning, but might possibly mean "bitter sea" in Hebrew. Isabel comes from the Hebrew name Elisheva which means "My God is an oath."
The name Moshe is an Egyptian name, not a Hebrew name. But it sounds like the Hebrew verb mashá (משה), which means "to draw water out."
Ihuh is the Egyptian name for Jehovah. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Jehovah" is not even the name for god. It is a German attempt at pronouncing the Tetragrammaton in the Masoretic Hebrew scripture, however the Masoretic scribes intentionally placed the vowel points of the Hebrew word "Elohim" on the Tetragrammaton consonants instead of the correct ones (which are unknown as Jews will not pronounce it) to avoid the risk of accidentally "taking the name of god in vain" while reading the Hebrew scripture. When pronounced with these incorrect vowels the Tetragrammaton simply becomes a nonsense word.