The Hebrew word for "son" is ben.The Hebrew suffix denoting "his" is -o.The Hebrew word for "his son" would have been beno (with the stress on the final syllable), but the "e" in benbecomes a schwa, and what you get therefore is b'no. (In informal modern Hebrew, the schwa is frequently dropped altogether, and what you then get is just bno.)
'Ben' is the Hebrew word for 'son' and so a 'ben Solomon' in Hebrew and Bible terms is a son of Solomon.
khatan (חתן)
The Hebrew word for "my son" is "b'nee".
ben (בן) means either "son" or "son of"
Bar Mitzvah (בר מצוה), but it actually means "son of commandment" not "son of the commandment".
tzev isn't a Hebrew word. Maybe you meant: bar tzav (בר צב) = "son of a turtle" bar ze'ev (בר זאב) = "son of a wolf" bar zav (בר זב) = "son of a man rendered impure because of a urethral secretion"
Dear son in Hebrew is Ben Yakar (בן יקר)
The word "son" means a male child or descendant, whether in a text from the Bible or anywhere else. The actual word "son" is the English translation of the Hebrew word for son in the Old Testament, and the Greek word "son" in the New Testament. There is no hidden or mystical or special meaning beyond the common sense of the word. A "son of Abraham" is Abraham's male offspring (or descendant.) The "son of Mary," is Mary's male child (or descendant.)
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.
Barac (بارك) means blessed; it's Arabic and the Hebrew version is barukh.
Calalini is not a Hebrew word and has no meaning in Hebrew.