This is right.
This is wrong. If you want to write a woman from a place called עלם ('elam), you would write עלמית ('elamith)., not עלמי. Unless the woman is a man.
Also, this name is spelled עילם in Tanach. That would make it עילמית.
If you chance x to a and y to b and z to c, then you have the first three letters of the alphabet! This shows that the last three letters of the alphabet are really the first three letters, thus proving the cyclic nature of the ABC's.
Two verses earlier, Esther is identified as the daughter of Avichayil, a relative of Mordechai the Benjamite from the Judean Kingdom. A recurring theme throughout the book is that she doesn't want to say that she's really Jewish.
If you want to say she didn't really exist, that's cool. But you're basically lifting the name of someone out of a text and applying it to something completely unrelated.
'aminada? This is not good spelling of whatever it is you wanted to write.
I understand in general the problem of the reason why many if not most Jews reject the Old Testament as being Jewish scripture, therefore reject the designation of the Bible as Judeo - Christian.
I believe corrupted translation, ie 'young woman' versus virgin to justify prophesy, and corrupted interpretation as in using references in the OT, like the plural for God, to justify the Trinity are examples.
I would like to here from you more on why the Jews consider the Old Testament a corruption of Jewish scripture.
Jayhawker Soule designates his belief as Judaism, but presents mostly Christian apologist arguments. Are there actually many Jews that support considering the Old Testament as Jewish scripture?