father = av (אב)
fathers = avōt (אבות)
dad = ábbah (אבא)dads = ábba'im (אבאים)
Note: abbah can also mean daddy, pop, or any other informal form of dad.
The Hebrew word for father (אב) occurs, in various forms, 938 times in the Hebrew Bible.
The Hebrew word for father is av (אב), but it's not really any different in meaning compared to the English word, except that in Hebrew it can refer to a ancestor (male and female) whereas in English, use of the word "father" to mean ancestor is sexist.
av (אב) = father nu (× ×•) = well But avnu is not a Hebrew word.
It is the Hebrew and Aramaic word for father, and it is also the initials of the band members of the group ABBA
Abba means 'father'.
It depends on how you spell "avah" in Hebrew: אבה = to want (poetic way of saying want) אבהּ = her father עבה = to thicken עבהּ = her cloud אווה = lust
Abba (אבא) means "father". It is actually Aramaic. The Hebrew word is Av (אב). In modern Hebrew, Abba means "dad" or "daddy".
No, Yahweh is the Hebrew/Jewish word for "Lord." The God of the Hebrews. Zeus was the father of Hercules.
abba is not an English word. If you mean the Hebrew word for father "aba" (אבא), the Yiddish word is tata (טאַטע)
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.
That is a Yiddish word borrowed from Hebrew. In Yiddish it refers to a persons' child's in-laws. (There is no such English word for this relationship). For example, your daughter's mother-in-law and father-in-law would be your machatunim.This word comes from the Hebrew word מחותנים (meh-khoo-tah-neem), which means "married ones."
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.