Arguably, there are only 3 angels mentioned by name in The Bible (Catholic Bible has more):
Michael, whose name means "Who is like God?," is one of the three archangels.
Gabriel, whose name means "Champion of God,"
Lucifer, whose name means "light bearer or morning star.'
Their names are not mentioned in The Bible
If you mean the Hebrew scriptures, then 2 are definetly mentioned - Michael and Gabriel. The Latin translation for a third - Lucifer - is also noted.
Not sure especially that the explicit mentioned names are different from one Bible to another.More information:No. Many other names are mentioned in the Bible in addition to the names of prophets.One more informationIn Quran, Muslims holy book, 25 prophets are mentioned by name although said in Quran that many other prophets are there but not mentioned by name in Quran. refer to related question below for the names of those 25 prophets.
The Bible does not say the names or genders of the fallen angels. Angels don`t have a gender.
The names of Lots daughters are not mentioned in the bible.
No dog mentioned in the Bible is named.
There are only two (three if you're Catholic) angels mentioned by name in the Bible: Michael and Gabriel (the Book of Tobit adds Raphael, but most Protestant denominations consider that book apocryphal). But if your referring to the name of the category of angels that are closest to God in heaven, it is "Archangel".
The names of three angels are known:-MichaelGabrielLucifer(Satan was the archangel Lucifer before his rebellion and fall.)
No, not in the King James or New King James versions. The only angels mentioned by names are Michael, Gabiel, Lucifer who changed himself through sin into Satan.
There were two gardens mentioned in the bible The garden of Eden and the garden of gethsamane.
See related links for the names of 188 women mentioned in the King James Version of the bible.
A:Matthew 13:55-56 identifies the brothers as James, Joses, Simon and Judas and says that Jesus had sisters, without naming them. This is omission is not surprising, as girls were regarded as much less important than boys.