The phrase "May peace prevail on earth" in Hebrew is pronounced as "Yitgaddal veyitkaddash shemey raba." In Hebrew, each letter has a specific sound, and the pronunciation follows the rules of the language. The transliteration provided captures the phonetic sounds of the Hebrew words in the phrase.
May Peace Prevail on Earth
cierra is the spanish word for "it closes". As a name, it is also a variation of Sierra, which is a jagged mountain range.There is no equivalent name in Hebrew, but you can spell it סיארה
The Latin equivalent of 'May peace prevail on earth' is Pax in terra vinceat. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'pax' means 'peace'. The preposition 'in' means 'in'. The noun 'terra' means 'earth'. The verb 'vinceat' means '[he/she/it] may prevail'.
The phrase "Peace on Earth, goodwill toward men" comes from the Bible, specifically Luke 2:14 in the New Testament. It is part of the angelic announcement to the shepherds about the birth of Jesus. The message conveys a wish for peace and goodwill to prevail among all people.
No. "To water" is an infinitive, not a preposition.
Earth as in soil = אדמה (adamah) (Planet) Earth = כדור הארץ (kadur ha'aretz)
No. It is an adverb phrase that answers the question where.
The World Peace Prayer Society's motto is 'May Peace Prevail On Earth'.
"to earth" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
"to water the earth" is a verbal phrase- more precisely an infinitive phrase. It could be expressed as "to irrigate"
adamah (אדמה) = dirt, land, earth
Terra firmaåÊis a Latin phrase meaning "solid earth" (fromåÊterraåÊ"earth" andåÊfirmaåÊ"solid"). The phrase refers to the dryåÊland massåÊon the earth's surface and is used to differentiate from the sea or air.