"kha-TAHN" (חתן)
חתן = kha-TAHN
A Yiddish speaker refers to a groom as a "chah-TAHN", even though the word is Hebrew.
cha'tan
Machutin, meaning a man's father-in-law, is a Hebrew word (mechutan), though it's often pronounced a little differently in Yiddish (mechutin). It is spelled מחותן and comes from the Hebrew word חתן which means groom.
chatan lev aish is nonsense. It means "fire heart groom". If you want to say groom's heart of fire, it's lev esh shel chatan (לב אש של חתן)
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.
Calalini is not a Hebrew word and has no meaning in Hebrew.
The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew definition.The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew word. It's a name. You can spell it ווֹמאק in Hebrew letters.
diestra has no meaning in Hebrew. This is not a Hebrew word.
Sydney is not a Hebrew word. It has no meaning in Hebrew.
But is not a a Hebrew word. The English word But means אבל (aval) in Hebrew.
The Hebrew word "Notsri" (× ×•×¦×¨×™) does not appear in the Hebrew Bible. Notsri is a Modern Hebrew word.
No. Janah is not a Hebrew word, and the Hebrew word for Paradise comes from the Hebrew word pardess (פרדס) which means "orchard."