No. 'Grave' means a hole people are buried in, or secondly 'very serious' .
I think it's supposed to be loca, which means crazy...
L'amour is the French word for love - Lamour is also a family name
Any grandchild, male or female, is tsehe-vexahestovestse. The same word also means a son-in-law or daughter-in-law.The word for "my grandchild" is nexahe.
Bonnie or bonny means pretty, attractive, or excellent, as in "She's a bonny lass."
This is not originally a Malayalam word. This word has been derived from Sanskrit and also being used in other Indian languages. In English this means 'egoism'.
The grave. Actually the English word, "grave" is the equivalent of the Hebrew and Greek words "Hades" and "Sheol," which means "mankind's common grave." These words have been interpreted as the word hell. That is actually what the word hell means, and has nothing to do with a firey place of torment.
No it simply means He was in the grave. The Greek word here is 'hades' which is equivalent to the Hebrew 'sheol' and means grave or pit. You question has more of a leaning towards Dante's 'Inferno.'
The word; Hell, in the Christian bible is translated from the word Hades. Hades literally translated means, the common grave of all dead. So if looked at from that aspect, yes all people will go to hell. We will all die eventually, thereby being dead, we are in the common state of the grave. Hell is not a place of fiery torment but the state of being dead.
It is a word from Inuyasha, Sonyosho which means insects of hell
Heck is a word substituted for hell, and means hell.
First, there is no such thing as a "Hebrew Old Testament". But I can tell you're clearly referring to the "Hebrew Bible". Second, the word is She'ol (שאול), which literally means "unknown" or "question". There is no Biblical Hebrew word for hell.
Sheol is an OT name for 'the place of departed souls'. It correspond to the NT word for 'hades'. In the KJV it is translated as hell/grave/pit.If you have a bible dictionary look the word up there.
No, the word "school" does not mean "hell." "School" typically refers to an institution where students learn and receive education, while "hell" is often used to describe a place of suffering or eternal punishment in certain religious beliefs.
vagrants (whatever the hell it means) vagrants (whatever the hell it means)
morgue
a good one would be grave
The Latin word which means hell is Tartarus and hellfire is Inferí.