the root letters are alef, he, bet or × ×” ב
Hebrew doesn't have root words, but it has a system of root consonants. Most words have either a 3-consonant root or a 4-consonant root, called a shoresh. The Hebrew word for manifestations is ×”×¤×’× ×•×ª (hafganot) and the shoresh is פ.×’.×
It's not clear if you are asking for the root or the word (those are two different things in Hebrew). The word is metsuyyan (מצוין) The root is צ.×™.× (tsadi, yod, nun)
to seek = kheepes (חיפש). the root is ח.פ.ש
Most every Hebrew word has a root, which is set of 3 consonants. (Some roots have 4, and a few foreign roots have 5.)The root is the building block of the Hebrew language. It is the same in Arabic.
meh-OHD (מאוד) (also transliterated as me'od or m'od)
You might be thinking of Greek, which has four distinct concepts of love. There is only one Hebrew word (root) for love:noun = ahava (אהבה)verb = ahav (אהב)
If you are asking what the Hebrew word for love is, it's ahava (אהבה)."Ryah" does not appear to be a Hebrew word.
The Hebrew word for "love" is "ahava," pronounced "a-ha-VAH."
The Hebrew word for love is ahava (אהבה) and its oldest recorded use is in the Torah, but its actual origin is unknown.
Loving heart = lev ahava (לב אהבה)
Ahava means love, it is also the name of a cosmetics company that sells products from the dead sea.
ahava
Unlike Greek, there is only one word for love in Hebrew, אהבה, ahava. In fact, ahava also means like.Greek has 4 basic concepts of love.
faith = emunah (?????) hope = tikvah (?????) love = ahavah (????)
if you are male, your love = ahava shelkha if you are female, your love = ahava shelakh
The three-consonant root of the Hebrew word for "to care for" is ט.פ.ל
ahava po (אהבה פה)