Quote Originally Posted by thesignalreceivers
Did you know that aura which you mentioned comes from the word ore and they are both hebrew words.
I hate to poop your party guys but-

ore
12c., merger of O.E. ora "ore, unworked metal" (related to ear "earth"); and O.E. ar "brass, copper, bronze," from P.Gmc. *ajiz- (cf. O.N. eir "brass, copper," Ger. ehern "brazen," Goth. aiz "bronze"), from PIE *aus- "gold" (cf. Skt. ayah "metal," Avestan ayo, L. aes "brass"). The two words were not fully assimilated till 17c.; what emerged has the form of ar but the meaning of ora.

From http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?l=o&p=6

aura
1859, "subtle emanation around living beings;" earlier "gentle breeze" (1398), from L. aura "breeze, wind, air," from Gk. aura "breath, breeze," from PIE base *awer-.

Also PIE Proto-Indo-European, the hypothetical reconstructed ancestral language of the Indo-European family. The time scale is much debated, but the most recent date proposed for it is about 5,500 years ago.

So sadly, neither of those words are hebrew; one is Old English and one is PIE (Proto-Indo-European).

Keep trying though!