Yes you can if you want to. But maybe you want to think twice before you do that ...
Pursuant to one tradition concerning names, a person's Hebrew name is
changed when the person is terminally ill and thought to be near death.
People do not automatically change their name when they convert to Judaism. They may choose a Hebrew name, but this is not an official name change.
Hebrew Scripture
Shuk (שוק)
It occurs in the Hebrew text, but it's probably a name from another language.
The Tanakh; the Tanach; the Hebrew scriptures; the Jewish Bible.
The name "Ruth" is a word that came directly from Hebrew with very little change. The Hebrew pronunciation is "ROOS" for Ashkenazic Hebrew speakers, and "ROOT" for Sephardic Hebrew speakers.
Yes. It's a biblical name ... one of the names by which Yitro, Moses' father-in-law, was known. From Hebrew, it translates roughly as " See ! G-d."
Yes, Jireh is another name for God. It is a Hebrew term that means "provider" or "God will provide."
There is no Hebrew name for Andrea.There is no Hebrew name for Andrea.
It's called a yad - in Hebrew text, יד, meaning "hand."
There is no Hebrew name for Beatrice. There is only a Hebrew name for names that come from Hebrew, or names that have the same meaning as Hebrew names. Beatrice means "traveler" and there is no Hebrew name with this meaning.There is no Hebrew name for Beatrice. There is only a Hebrew name for names that come from Hebrew, or names that have the same meaning as Hebrew names. Beatrice means "traveler" and there is no Hebrew name with this meaning.
Azazel is a Hebrew name that means scapegoat. It is not specifically another name for Satan but some religions use it as the name of a demon or fallen angel.