The term has been in use at least since 1600 BCE, perhaps earlier than that.
Hebrew was originally used for speaking and communicating. It still is used for that.
The Hebrew Bible is used for prayer, study, and is read from on special ocassions such as Holidays and Shabbat. The Torah (the first part of the Hebrew Bible) is also read from on Mondays and Thursdays.
Hebrew has been spoken for many thousands of years prior to the invention of Hebrew writing, so no one knows what the first Hebrew word was. The first Hebrew word in the Bible is "bereshít" (בראשית)
No. The books of the Hebrew Bible were written almost entirely in Hebrew. Only a few verses were written in Aramaic.
The first Hebrew letter is called "Alef" (א). It is a silent letter.
first is Rishon in Hebrew. In Hebrew you spell it Reish, Alef, Shin, Vav, Nun - ראשון
אה is not a Hebrew prefix. But א by itself can be a prefix indicating first person singular in the future tense. and ה is a prefix indicating either the word "the" or that the following sentence will be a question.
There is no Hebrew name for Thelma. In fact, no one knows where the name came from or what it means. When it was first used in print in 1887, it was considered a rare name.
No punctuation was used in Hebrew until about the 18th Century.
Saul became the first Hebrew king.
The Early Christian community did not use an edition. They used the original Hebrew scriptures until they were first translated into Greek.
It wasn't the Jews (plural) who wrote the first Torah, it was Moses, at God's dictation (Exodus 24:12, Deuteronomy 31:24). See also the Related Link.How did the first Torah-scroll come to be