"ah loo loo vah" is not Hebrew.
I think you mean ou là là , which is French, not Hebrew. So it has no meaning in Hebrew.
rec-ah has no meaning in Hebrew, but it's close to:reqaˁ (רקע) = "background"reiqah (ריקה) = "empty"racha (רכה) = "soft"
There is no way to write "am" in Hebrew. It just depends on the context of the sentence. I = ×× ×™ (pronounced ah-NEE)
This has no meaning in Hebrew. In fact, "tuh" is not a Hebrew syllable at all. (There is no way to make the uh sound in Hebrew).
No. one is either "eh-chad" (אחד) or "ah-chaht"
"ani" (×× ×™), pronounced ah-NEE There is no Hebrew word for "am" so ani could mean I or I'm.
if by Jewish you mean Hebrew then the word you are looking for is maazon (mah-ah-zone) and in Hebrew it is spelled מזון.luv, noah
This is gibberish. I recognize the Christian attempt to write the name of God, but the rest is not Hebrew.
ah-bah (אבא)AH-bah (אבא)
There is no such language as Jewish. If you mean Hebrew, then it is: אתה בן אדם × ×—×ž×“ (ah-TAH ben ah-DAHM nekh-MAHD)
ah (אה) means "oh!", but if you meant akh or ach (אח), it means brother.