It depends on the invitation, but it might be ב״ה which is an abbreviation that means "with God's help".
It's no different than adults. Just right the child's name on the envelope. By the way, Bar Mitzvah is for boys and Bat Mitzvah is for girls.
Yiddish is written with Hebrew letters. The Hebrew Letters to spell Perel (from right to left) are: Pey, Ayin, Resh, Ayin, Lamed.
It this is a vague question, but if you compare the Hebrew alphabet to the English (Latin) alphabet, the biggest differences are that Hebrew has no letters for vowels, and it is written from right to left.
Thank you for the invitation is right.
The right translation for reestablishment is "kimum" קימום This is quite a rare word. The words "Yisud Mechadash" or, in Hebrew letters "יסוד מחדש" will be more meaningful to most of the Hebrew-speakers.
You pronounce it the same way! To spell it, you would use these letters: lamed, vav, resh, nun, samekh. Remember that Hebrew is written from right to left! Hope this helps :-)
Modern Hebrew uses the same set of numbers that everyone else uses (0123456789) and these numbers are always written left-to-right. Biblical Hebrew uses letters for numbers, written right-to-left.
מעשים טובים - Good Deeds מִצוָה - Commandment (like the 10 Commandments) "Mitzvah" More commonly known as "good deed" in Yiddish and non-Hebrew speakers. 99.9% of the time this is the word you will hear when someone means to say Good Deeds in Hebrew or Yiddish.
yes, it is traditional to put the initials בע״ה (or בס"ד) on all Jewish documents, including invitations. This can sometimes be seen written in English (as B"H), but it's never spelled out.בע״ה stands for בעזרת השם (be'ezrat hashem) = With God's help.
Just like you did when you asked the question: Bat Mitzvah.
Yes, Hebrew writing is from right to left, except for numbers which are left to right.
There is nothing to fix. Hebrew is supposed to be read from right to left.