If you are asking how to say "the anatomy of the 3 letter root", it's ha anatomia shel ha shoresh ha dikduki" (×”×× ×˜×•×ž×™×” של השורש הדיקדוקי).
If you are asking something else, you'll need to clarify your question.
Hebrew doesn't have root words, but it has a system of root consonants. Most words have either a 3-consonant root or a 4-consonant root, called a shoresh. The Hebrew word for manifestations is ×”×¤×’× ×•×ª (hafganot) and the shoresh is פ.×’.×
That's Arabic, not Hebrew, though it does have a Hebrew cognate (cherem; and in one rare instance, charoum). In the Hebrew Bible, the 3-letter root is never vowelized as charam (kharam).In Arabic, it means something that is forbidden.
All semitic languages, including Hebrew, are based on the concept of a root (shoresh, שורש) which is a set of 3 consonants that contain the general meaning of the word. Some roots have 2 consonants and some have 4.
Gimel (ג)
There are 22 letters in the Hebrew alphabet. If you assume that any 3 letters could be a monogram, the answer is 10,648.
There is no such thing as a 2 rooted Hebrew word. Every Hebrew word has only 1 root, unless it's a modern neologism.
There aren't 3 letters that mean antichrist, mainly because there is no Hebrew word for antichrist. In fact, the 3 root letters in Obama's name in Hebrew means "blessed".
It depends on what you mean by a Hebrew language linguistic root. If you mean how many languages descended from Hebrew, the answer is 1: Modern Hebrew. If you mean how many 3- and 4-consonant roots are contained within Hebrew, the answer is approximately 10,600.
Most every Hebrew word has a root, which is set of 3 consonants. (Some roots have 4, and a few foreign roots have 5.)The root is the building block of the Hebrew language. It is the same in Arabic.
How about the word "Neo"
the answer is pre
1 is Yisrael Israel in Hebrew.