Grace (as a girl's name): גרייס (pronounced the same as in English)
Grace (as in niceness): חן (khen)
Grace (as in lack of clumsiness): לא מגושם (lo megusham)
Grace (as in a grace period for payments) חנינה (khaneenah)
It was probably coined in the U.S.A., but it is based on English and Hebrew roots.Lee is the Old English word for a "meadow".Chana is the Hebrew word for "grace", from which is derived the English name Ann.So a possible translation of Liana is "meadow of grace".
GRACE
The word khen (חן) can be translated as either "grace" or favor". kh is a gutteral sound. If you pronounce it like a k, it becomes the word for "yes".
the name is גרייס the translated word is חסד (che'sed)
The Hebrew name Chen (also spelled Khen or Hen) means "grace", "charm", or "attractiveness". An equivalent name in English would be Grace, however, Khen is a male name, and Grace is a female name.
You mean chen, not chan. chen (חן) is pronounced like "hen", but with a guttural sound at the beginning of the word.
Both halves mean the same thing.Anna is a Hebrew word that means "grace". Grace is an English word that means "forgiveness" or "undeserved favour".So only use this combination of names if you have a deliberate intention of conveying a strong message!
"Lee" is old English for "field". "Anna" is from the Hebrew word for "grace" (mercy, underserved favour, forgiveness, etc.). So "LeeAnna" might be translated "meadow of grace".
rakhamim ve-khesed metaknim et ha-shavur (רחמים וחסד מתקנים את השבור)Note: There isn't any Hebrew word that matches the Christian concept of grace, so I did the best I could.
Khannah (×—× ×”)
No. First of all, There is no "h" or "a" in the Hebrew alphabet. Hebrew uses a completely different set of letters than English does.Second, If you are just talking about sounds, and you combine the sounds "h" and "a" to make "ha" (spelled הַ), this is the Hebrew prefix meaning "the" or it can mean that the following sentence is a question.The Hebrew word for grace depends on context. It could be any of the following:chen (חן)chessed (חסד)chaninut (חנינותadinut (עדינות)if you're talking about a grace period, it is arka (ארכה)
The name Hanna is a variant of the name Hannah, which means "grace" or "favor" in Hebrew. It is a popular name with Biblical origins.