"You too, thank you!"
Shalom is usually translated as peace, but its closest English meaning is actually wholeness or wellness. It is a state of healthy being. Also often used as a greeting - like "hello!".
RSVP stands for the French phrase, répondez s'il vous plaît. Which basically means 'Please respond.'
It stands for respond soon via text
In Sephardic Hebrew, it is pronounced pretty much the way a native English reader would pronounce the transliteratioin you gave. The emphasis is on the second syllable of each word. The second word can almost be transliterated as something between bite and buy-it.In Ashkenazic Hebrew, Shalom becomes Sholem, with the emphasis on the first syllable, and Bayit is pronounced Beis, just one syllable.In Tiberian Hebrew, the way we think it was pronounced 2000 years ago, it would be Shalom Bayith. The reason we know this is that Greek writers transliterated the final Tav as a Theta, and English (but not modern Greek) preserves the Theta as a th.
"Répondez s'il vous plaît", which is a French phrase that can be translated in English as "respond if you please"
You respond the same way: Shabbat Shalom
When someone says "Shabbat shalom," an appropriate response would be to reciprocate the greeting by saying "Shabbat shalom" back. This traditional Hebrew greeting is commonly used on the Jewish Sabbath, which begins at sunset on Friday and ends at nightfall on Saturday. It is a way to wish someone a peaceful and restful Sabbath.
"Shabbat Shalom!"
You don't. You only say Shabbat shalom in Hebrew. If you are asking how French Jews greet each other on Shabbat, they say "Shabbat Shalom"
Shalom is both a greeting (like "hello", "hi") as well as peace.
Shabbat Shalom Lekulam means 'A Good Sabbath to Everyone'
Shabbat shalom is a Jewish greeting which we say during the day of Shabbat. See also:More about the Jewish Shabbat
Yes, that's the customary response.
'Shabbat shalom', which means 'A peaceful Sabbath', is said during Shabbat - sundown Friday to Saturday after twilight.
Shabbat Shalom is a greeting that Jews say to each other on Shabbat (the sabbath). It means "A peaceful Shabbat"
if you are asking what that means, it is: Shabbat Shalom. His heart knows discontent .
Judaism.