Sceadu is an Old English word, not a Hebrew word. See related links for pronunciation.
The word "khayil" is pronounced as kha-yil, with the stress on the first syllable. It is a Hebrew word that means strength or valor.
First off, that is a hebrew word meaning Alexis. You would pronounce it Ah-lex-is.
The word "shadow" comes from the Old English word "sceadu," which means "shade, darkness, or shadow." It is also related to the Old High German word "scato," meaning "shadow."
"Sheol" is pronounced as SHAY-ohl. It is a Hebrew word that refers to the underworld or the realm of the dead in Jewish and Christian theology.
The prefix of the word "pronounce" is "pro-".
There is no such Hebrew word.
am (עם), the Hebrew word for "people", is pronounced AHM.
Getsatsah doesn't appear to be a Hebrew word.
There is no such word in Hebrew, but it's close to the word pesher (פשר) which means "meaning" or "intent.
If you are asking how to pronounce the name Tiara in Hebrew, it's pronounced "tiara." If you are asking what the Hebrew word for a tiara is, it's kétehr (כתר).
There is no Hebrew equivalent to this word, and no concept of it in Judaism. In Israel, they use the English word, which they pronounce as mee-see-on-air.
key - daah
If you're asking what the Hebrew equivalent of Suzanne is, it's shoshanah (×©×•×©× ×”). If you're asking how to pronounce the word "Suzanne" in Hebrew, it would be about the same as in English.
sedekah is not a Hebrew word. It looks like you might be referring to tsedakah (צדקה) which is pronounced tsdah-KAH.
There is no Hebrew word for shylockian. You could say קְשֵׁה לֵב (ksheh-lev) which means hard-hearted.
There is no Hebrew word for Charisma. Israelis just use the word "charisma" (spelled כָרִיזְמָה) and they pronounce the ch as a gutteral sound, as in German.
English speakers typically pronounce it "KANE-en". The Hebrew word is pronounced "K'NAH-ahn".