Hebrew treats for gender so there are a variety of possible ways to express this idea: If the teacher is male: Moreh If the teacher is female : Morah If the person whose teacher it is is male: Shelcha (yours) if female: Shelach So your (f) teacher (f) would be: morah shelach your (m) teacher (m) would be: moreh shelcha your (f) teacher (m) would be: moreh shelach your (m) teacher (f) would be: morah shelcha
מורה This is what "teacher" is in the Hebrew manuscript.
מורה לאומנויות לחימה
A rabbi
There is no Hebrew word for "is" or any form of the verb "to be" in the present tense in Hebrew. It is just implied from context.She is a teacher = hee morah (היא מורה) which literally means "she teacher".
a male teacher = moreh (מורה) a female teacher = morah (מורה)
in Hebrew it means "TEACHER"
You say 'Yalda' in Hebrew
Professor is the same in Hebrew as it is in English: Professor (פרופסור). The Hebrew word for "teacher" or "instructor" is Moreh (מורה).
In Hebrew, it is: (a male teacher) = moreh ha-Torah (a female teacher) = morat ha-Torah
Has in Hebrew is: YESH
"Tikra" (תקרה) is how you say ceiling in Hebrew.
Inawah has no meaning in Hebrew