Yerushalayim hee nekhes Yehudi (×™×¨×•×©×œ×™× ×”×™× × ×›×¡ יהודי)
L'Shana Haba'a B'yerushalayim
the Jewish holidays = החגים היהודים (pronounced "hakhagim hayehudim")
Probably not. In Matthew's time, Hebrew was only used for Jewish religious purposes, and was no longer spoken as a common language. If Matthew did write in Hebrew, nothing survived to this day.
There is no Hebrew word for Jr. In Jewish tradition, a child is never named after a living parent, so there is no need for this word.
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you meant Hebrew, it's yafeh (יפה)Answer:"Yiddish" literally means "Jewish"; so yes, there is a language called Jewish. In Yiddish, "beautiful" is "schoen" (pronounced "shain").
There is no such language as "Jewish". If you meant Hebrew, it's טלית)Answer:"Yiddish" literally means "Jewish"; so yes, there is a language called Jewish. In Yiddish, Tallit is spelled טלית and pronounced Tallis.
How do you write "Oases" in Hebrew
Hebrew uses the same numbers as everyone else, so it would be 2004.In the Jewish religious system, there is a way to write Hebrew numbers, but this system is usually only used for numbers less than 1000, other than the Hebrew year. But if you want to use this system to write 2004, it would be תתתתת״ד
There is no such language as Jewish. If you mean Yiddish, there isn't any such word as "eres" in the Yiddish language. If you mean Hebrew, maybe you meant to write "eretz" (ארץ), which means land.
Hebrew uses the same numbers as the rest of the world, except for Jewish religious numbers (chapters and verses of the bible, Hebrew dates, etc.) 2009 can be written תתתתתט but it looks unusual that way.
halakh (הלך) = "he went" or "he walked" If by chance you meant to write halakha (הלכה), this means "Jewish Religious Law".
If you are are talking about the Jewish religious service, Mincha, it's ×ž× ×—×”. If you are talking about the portuguese word for "my" (minha), it's שלי.