"deep sleep" in Hebrew is תַּרְדֵּמָה (tardemá). In Modern Hebrew, this word means "hibernation."
This word occurs 15 times in the Hebrew Bible. Here are the verses in no particular order:
Genesis 2:21
Genesis 15:12
Judges 4:21
1 Samuel 26:12
Job 4:13
Job 33:15
Proverbs 19:15
Isaiah 29:10
Daniel 10:9
Daniel 8:18
Psalm 76:6
Jonah 1:5
Jeremiah 51:57
Jeremiah 51:39
Nahum 3:18
how many times is the word sleep used in the new testament
The word "Bread" occurs over 250 times in the combined Hebrew Bible and New Testament. The first reference to bread is in Genesis 14:18; The last reference is in Hebrews 9:2. Most references come from the Hebrew Bible, with fewer in the New Testament.
'Jehovah' occurs 7 times in the Old Testament of the KJV Bible; 3 times in combination with another Hebrew word, and 4 times alone
122 times in the Old Testament, using the Hebrew word ore, and 70 times in the new, using the Greek word Phos.
The Hebrew word for father (אב) occurs, in various forms, 938 times in the Hebrew Bible.
Journey is in the Bible 8 times, 6 in the Old Testament and 2 in the New Testament.
'Cannot' is mentioned 175 times in the Bible. (106 times in the Old Testament and 69 times in the New Testament.)
Though primarily a term for the Scriptures used by millions of Jews today, it is at times used to describe the Old Testament used in Christianity. The Old Testament is basically the same as the Hebrew Bible with some changes in book order with some additions/modifications that in no way changes the main message of the writings as a whole.
Sholom (שולום) is not a word in Hebrew, so, none. If you meant Shalom (שלום), it comes up around 120 times in the Old Testament.
In the NKJ Bible the word door is used 159 times. 125 times in the Old Testament and 34 times in the New Testament.
Christians adopted the Hebrew Bible, the holy book of the Jews, as the Old Testament of the Christian Bible because Jesus, Paul and the other authors of the Christian New Testament repeatedly quote from or refer to text in the Hebrew Bible. Had Christians abandoned that text, the references to it in the New Testament would make very little sense. After the death of Jesus, Christians read the Hebrew Bible very closely to re-interpret almost everything in Chritological terms. Jews generally find these reinterpretations amusing, at best and quite annoying at other times.
336 times. 83 times in the Old Testament and 253 times in the New Testament