Hebrew Spelling
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@Coagvla said
"Hey all, I was wondering if anyone can help me with some suggestions for splelling the names Chloe and Luke in Hebrew. The o and e are throwing me so any ideas will be greatly appreciated. Thank you."
If you mean transliteration the English into Hebrew letters for gematria purposes, the traditional standard is to make the E a Heh = 5, and the O as A'ayin. (This shouldn't be confused with transliterating words into actual Hebrew.
Chloe = Ch L O H = 113
Luke = L V K H = 61 -
Cheers Jim, incredibly helpful :
Luke
30 6 20 5 = 61
30 + 6 = 36 20 + 5 = 25
6squared + 5squared = 61
Hexagram + Pentagram = Ain
Abrahadabra
Also:
Luke M****** M***** (full name)
61 + 94 + 512 = 671
61 x 11 = 671
671 = Gk: paneles - complete, perfect.
from Hebrews 7:25: 'Therefore He is able also to save forever those who draw near to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them.'
671 = Tiphareth(6) united to Kether(1) (61) by Love (7) -
I've got another one. COAGVLA (spelt with a V rather than U) , I of course have a few different ideas but I was wondering which Hebrew letters, someone who wasn't invested in the outcome, would ascribe to these letters. All replies much appreciated.
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Since it's Latin, why not use Latin Qabalah Simplex?
C=3
O=13
A=1
G=7
V=19
L=10
A=154
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@ Avshalom. Cheers bro have some Latin ideas already, am curious more about Hebrew, specifically Ch v K (for C) , Ayin v Aleph (for A) , Ayin v Vav (for O)
@ Patrick. Not ure what yr Relevant Entries post refers to Brother (the number 54?)
Thank you both for the input.
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Yes, the 54 in Latin Simplex.
@Coagvla said
"am curious more about Hebrew, specifically Ch v K (for C) , Ayin v Aleph (for A) , Ayin v Vav (for O) "
Hard C is definely mostly Kaph, Aleph for A and Ayin for O. But if you're checking some word that is highly relevant for you, you'll want to tweak it around in as many reasonable ways as possible.
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O should be Ayin, with Vav as an alternative.
Normal S would be Samekh. Shin just doesn't seem right, and never got me anywhere in this context. I don't know about it being apropriate for a "Sh" sound.
Vav for F? Never seen it. F to me would be Peh.
Anyway, the important thing is to be internally consistent within a word. For instance, if in one spelling you use Aleph as E, don't use it as A, or if you use Vav as U, don't use it as O.