Ἑβραΐς
τῶν δ᾿ ἄλλων τῶν νοσηματικῶν ἧττον μετέχουσιν αἱ γυναῖκες → apart from this one, women are less troubled by maladies
Spanish (DGE)
-ΐδος
hebrea, judía γυναῖκες I.AI 2.226, φωνή LXX 4Ma.12.7, 16.15, διάλεκτος Act.Ap.21.40, 22.2, 26.14, Papias 2.16, γλῶττα Thdt.Is.6.354, Sud.s.u. Λουκιανὸς ὁ μάρτυς.
English (Strong)
from Ἐβέρ; the Hebraistic (Hebrew) or Jewish (Chaldee) language: Hebrew.
English (Thayer)
(WH Αβραΐς, see their Introductory § 408), ἑβραιδος, ἡ, Hebrew, the Hebrew language; not that however in which the O. T. was written, but the Chaldee (not Syro-Chaldaic, as it is commonly but incorrectly called; cf. A. Th. Hoffmann, Grammat. Syriac., p. 14), which at the time of Jesus and the apostles had long superseded it in Palestine: Ἑβραΐς φωνή, B. D., under the phrase, Shemitic Languages etc.; ibid. American edition, under the phrase, Language of the New Testament.)