Tabernacle is type of a tower... It had a lot of purposes.... There are purposes for each furniture and rooms...
(Bear in mind that the Tabernacle [Mishkan] and the Temple [Mikdash] are two distinct things.) The tabernacle itself, without the yard surrounding it was ten by thirty amos, or about 5 by 15 meters (about 16 by 48 feet).
The word 'tabernacle' appears 307 times in the King James version of the Bible.
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.
Calalini is not a Hebrew word and has no meaning in Hebrew.
The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew definition.The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew word. It's a name. You can spell it ווֹמאק in Hebrew letters.
Sydney is not a Hebrew word. It has no meaning in Hebrew.
diestra has no meaning in Hebrew. This is not a Hebrew word.
But is not a a Hebrew word. The English word But means אבל (aval) in Hebrew.
The Jews are also known as the sons of Israel (בני ישראל, B'nei Yisrael in Hebrew). The tribe of Levi was responsible for the Tabernacle (Numbers ch.3 and ch.8).
The word 'Shekinah' (Shechinah), which means "that which dwells", is not found in the Bible, but it's description is. Exodus 25:21-22 and Leviticus 16:2 describe a luminous cloud above and between the two cherubs on the Ark of the Covenant. It would have been the only light in the "Most Holy" compartment of the tabernacle, especially benefiting the high priest when he entered the chamber on Atonement Day.The word, Shekinah is, however, found in the Targumim (the Aramaic paraphrases of the Hebrew Scriptures Exodus 25:8; 29:45, 46; Numbers 5:3; 35:34) where the Hebrew word "dwell" or "tabernacle" is represented by " Shekinah".
No. Janah is not a Hebrew word, and the Hebrew word for Paradise comes from the Hebrew word pardess (פרדס) which means "orchard."