1. (בְּרֵ×שִ×ית / Bereshit) - Genesis
2. (שמות / Shmot) - Exodus
3. (×•×™×§×¨× / Vayikra) - Leviticus
4. (במדבר / Bemidbar) - Numbers
5. (×“Ö°Ö¼×‘Ö¸×¨Ö´×™× / Devarim) - Deuteronomy
B'raysheet Sh'mot (long "o")
Vayikra ("a" as in "father")
Bamidbar
D'vareem
The apostrophe indicates a very short pause (shva na).
The above are spelled more phonetically than the usual English transliterations.
See also:
B-rei-sheet. Sh-mot. Va-yik-rah. Bah-mid-bar. D-var-eem. Very short pauses at the hyphens.
Bereisheet (Genesis)
Shemot (Exodus)
Vayikra (Leviticus)
Bamidbar (Numbers)
Devarim (Deuteronomy).
In order:
Bereisheet (Genesis)
Shemot (Exodus)
Vayikra (Leviticus)
Bamidbar (Numbers)
Devarim (Deuteronomy)
Pentateuch which means "five books." The Torah in Hebrew is the 5 books of Moses.
The first five books of the Bible are called the Torah (teaching in Hebrew). Their original Hebrew names are, in this order:BereishitShmotVayikraBamidbarDevarim
The Hebrew names for the books of the Bible are not translations of the English names. In Hebrew, books are usually named after their first significant word or words. The first word in the Book of Leviticus is Vayikra (ויקרא) which means "And [he] called".So, the Hebrew name for the Book of Leviticus is Vayikra.
The Torah is in Hebrew, but other languages come in books.
GENESIS = Bereshit (In the Beginning)EXODUS = Shemot (Names)LEVITICUS = Vayikra (And he called)NUMBERS = Bamidbar (In the Desert)DEUTERONOMY = Devarim (Words/matters)The Hebrew names for the 5 books of Moses derive from the first verse of that book, sometimes the first word.Book = SeferFive books of Moses (Book form) = Chumash (Five or fifth)Five books of Moses (Scroll form) = Sefer Torah pl.Sifrei Torah
The Torah is the source and basis for all of the beliefs, morals, standards, values, principles, and practices of Judaism and its adherents. In its original form, it is written in Hebrew. It has been translated into virtually every language in the civilized world, and its translation is easily accessible, appearing as the first five books of the "old testament". The Hebrew titles corresponding to the translated titles of the five books are: Genesis .. . . . . . . B'raysheet Exodus . . . . . . . . She'mot Leviticus . . . . . . . Vayikrah Numbers . . . . . . . Bamidbar Deuteronomy . .. . D'varim
No, Torah is Hebrew for Torah. The word 'Tanach' is actually an acronym made from the names of the three sections of the Jewish Bible: Torah, Nevi'im, K'tuvim.
They are known as the Chumash
This question has two possible answers. The reason is that the first five Hebrew books of the Bible are not refered to as the "gospel." Only the part of the Bible that gives the accounts of the minstry of Jesus is called the gospels. The first five books of the Bible was called the Pentateuch. That refers to the first five books of the "Old Testiment," or "Hebrew Scriptures" that were written by Moses in the Hebrew language. The part of the Bible that is normally referred to as the gospels, that is, the minstry of Jesus, are the first four books of the "New Testiment," or "Greek Scriptures." This is the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
There are 5 books of laws in the Hebrew Bible, and together they form the Torah (תורה).
The Torah (תורה)
It is called the Torah.