high = gavo'a (גבוה) place = makom (מקום) heights = ramah (רמה)
It depends on the context of the sentence. The Hebrew word for high is gavo'a (גבוה) or ram (רם). The phrase "God on high" is an idiom in Hebrew: el elyon (קל עליון) which literally means "uppermost God".
pochéd gvahím (פוחד גבהים)
The Hebrew language doesn't use symbols. It uses letters and words. the phrase "blessing from heaven" is ברכה מהשם (brakha mehashem).
In hebrew & aramaic it means heaven .
linpol meharamah (×œ× ×¤×™×œ מהרמה)
If a male was taken to Heaven: lakuach le Gan EdenIf a female was taken to Heaven: lekucha le Gan Eden
Heaven, referring to the afterlife, is never mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. There is no Biblical Hebrew word for this concept. However, Early modern English translations used the word "heaven" as a poetic word for sky, and the word sky (שמיים) appears 653 times. Many Christian translations continue to use the word "heaven" in their translations, when the word שמיים in the Hebrew text is either referring literally to the sky, or figuratively, to God.
to fall from heaven (or to fall from the sky) = nafal mehashamayim (× ×¤×œ מהשמיים)
In Genesis 28, in the Hebrew Bible, Jacob dreams that he sees a ladder reaching up to heaven.
gan eden Means "Garden of Eden." Heaven as in sky is "shamayim"-- spelled shin-mem-yod-mem
from heaven = mehashamayim (מהשמיים), pronounced meh hah shah mah yeem.