To a male: ma shlomkha (מַה שְּׁלוֹמְךָ)
To a female: ma shlomekh (מַה שְׁלוֹמֵךָ)
The word for "water" in Hebrew is "" (mayim).
You can say "আমি শিখছি" in Bengali, which translates to "I am learning".
"You are learning Italian" = "Stai imparando Italiano""I am learning Italian" = "Sto imparando Italiano"
To say "I am learning" in Farsi, you can say "من دارم یاد میگیرم" (pronounced as "man dar-am yad mi-giram").
You would say "handicap d'apprentissage" in French to mean learning disability.
hayom (היום)
shum davar hayom (שום דבר היום)
timkeri har'be hayom, be'vakasha
to a male: ma aseeta hayom to a female: ma aseet hayom
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew
תמכרי הרבה היום Is pronounced "Timkeri Harbeh Hayom".
maf'sidan, but this is an old fashioned word, all Hebrew speakers today use the English word instead, "loser", like many other words.
Has in Hebrew is: YESH
"Tikra" (תקרה) is how you say ceiling in Hebrew.
to a male: eikh atah margish hayom to a female: eikh aht margisha hayom
Learning (noun) = torah (תורה), limud (לימוד), limudim (לימודים)
There is nothing wrong with a Catholic learning Hebrew.