In Hebrew, the word for earthquake is "רעידת אדמה," which is pronounced as "re'idat adama." The emphasis is typically on the second syllable of "re'idat." If you're looking for a phonetic representation, it can be approximated as "ray-ee-daht ah-dah-mah."
An earthquake's Focus is located directly under the Epicenter of an earthquake. The Epicenterof an earthquake is located on the surface of the earthquake.
No, the Haiti earthquake in 2010 was not the strongest earthquake ever recorded. The strongest earthquake ever recorded was the 1960 Valdivia earthquake in Chile, which had a magnitude of 9.5 on the Richter scale.
The most devastating earthquake of 1999 was in Taiwan. It is also known as the Jiji Earthquake. The earthquake reached a magnitude of 7.6.
The origin of an earthquake is called the hypocenter or focus. This is the point within the Earth where the earthquake begins and energy is released.
differences in earthquake intensity; differences in demographics at/near the earthquake site
There is no such Hebrew word.
Israelis would pronounce the name Kenneth as Kenet, since there is no th in Hebrew.
am (עם), the Hebrew word for "people", is pronounced AHM.
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You pronounce the name Michael, Mike ul. The name is Hebrew and the people who speak that language pronounce that... or at least they used to. I learned that in a Hebrew class.
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).
Bridgette is pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
Its pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
Ila is pronounced exactly the same in Hebrew as it is in English.
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.
Ginah, Hebrew for garden
חברה שלך