sÅf ha-yÅm (סוף היו×)
No it is not. In fact, no Hebrew word can begin with F or end with ing.
The Hebrew alphabet has 22 different letters, and any one of them can be at the end of a word. Five of them change shape when they fall at the end:×›, ךמ, ×× , ןפ, ףצ, ×¥
Yab does not appear to be a Hebrew word, because Hebrew words cannot end with b (unless it's a word borrowed from Arabic or another language).
There are no Hebrew words similar to the English word Education. If you're asking about loan words that end in -tion, In Hebrew they would end with -atsia (־ציה).
Yom = day
day
"YOME", rhymes with 'home', means "day" in Hebrew. "YAHM", rhymes with 'bomb', means "sea" or "ocean" in Hebrew.
The nun is a letter from the Hebrew alphabet - there's also a final nun, which always appears at the end of a Hebrew word.
Mem is a Hebrew letter with the sound of M. it is written מat the end of a word, it is written ם
yehuda in aramaic is pronounced the same as in Hebrew but spelled with an aleph at the end of the word and not a heh. The aramaic for yehudim is yehudai ending with an aleph followed by a yud
The word that sounds like "YOME" is a Hebrew word that means "day".
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.