Obediah?!
Hebrew prophets with 4 letter names (when written in English) are:IddoJehuAmosAmozJoelOded(Sara can be included if written without the h).
Hebrew
There are Greek one-letter words in the New Testament, but there are no one-letter words in Hebrew.The English word 'a' referring to the indefinite article, occurs many times in all English translations.
The Tenakh is the Hebrew bible or the Hebrew scriptures.This is the most important scripture to the Hebrew family. It's name is an acronym of the first letter of the 3 sections in Hebrew: * Torah - the 5 books of Moses * Neviim -the Prophets, and * Ketuvim - the Writings
Zephaniah and Zechariah.
The word 'Tanakh' is a Hebrew TLA ... a Three-Letter Acronym, formed of the initialletters of the words "Torah, Nevi'im, K'tuvim". Those are the Hebrew designationsfor the major divisions of the Bible: Torah, Prophets, and Writings.Thus "Tanakh" is the referential title of the entire Hebrew Bible from Genesis to Chronicles.You may recognize many of its components because of their correspondence to, and yourthorough familiarity with, books of the "old testament", which is after all nothing but atranslation of the Tanakh.
There is no biblical meaning for this letter as the Bible was written in Hebrew, Yiddish and some Chaldean - with the New Testament in Greek. The letter "D" is from the Latin alphabet, derived from the Greek "delta."
This verse is from the New testament, so it doesn't come from Hebrew. It comes from Greek. I'm not sure why you ended it with four "ands" though.
The acrostic psalm written by King David is Psalm 119. This psalm is divided into 22 sections of 8 lines each, with each line starting with the same letter. Since the Hebrew alphabet has 22 letters there are 22 sections, with the first section starting with the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet [Alef] for 8 verses, then the second section starting with the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet [Bet] for another 8 verses, and so on all the way down to the last section and the last letter [Tav].
The following names of Hebrew letters are spelled with 4 letters when written in English:alefchetayinreshshin
'tah-NAKH' is a Hebrew 3-letter acronym, formed by the initial letters of the Hebrew words for -- Torah -- Prophets ('neh-VEE-ihm') -- Writings ('kheh-TOO-vihm') So it's just the top-level generic descriptor for its contents.
In most English translations of the Old Testament, Jehovah is translated as "LORD" with all capital letters to distinguish it as a substitute for the Hebrew name for God, YHWH. This tradition originated from the practice of avoiding vocalizing the sacred name of God.