Tubal-cain, Tubalcain (Hebrew #8423)

Genesis
4:22   And Zillah
Tsillah (Hebrew #6741)
Tsillah, an antediluvian woman
KJV usage: Zillah.
Pronounce: tsil-law'
Origin: feminine of 6738
, she also bare
yalad (Hebrew #3205)
to bear young; causatively, to beget; medically, to act as midwife; specifically, to show lineage
KJV usage: bear, beget, birth((-day)), born, (make to) bring forth (children, young), bring up, calve, child, come, be delivered (of a child), time of delivery, gender, hatch, labour, (do the office of a) midwife, declare pedigrees, be the son of, (woman in, woman that) travail(-eth, -ing woman).
Pronounce: yaw-lad'
Origin: a primitive root
Tubal-cain
Tuwbal (Hebrew #8423)
offspring of Cain; Tubal-Kajin, an antidiluvian patriarch
KJV usage: Tubal-cain.
Pronounce: Qayin
Origin: apparently from 2986 (compare 2981) and 7014
, an instructor
latash (Hebrew #3913)
properly, to hammer out (an edge), i.e. to sharpen
KJV usage: instructer, sharp(-en), whet.
Pronounce: law-tash'
Origin: a primitive root
of every artificer
choresh (Hebrew #2794)
a fabricator or mechanic
KJV usage: artificer.
Pronounce: kho-rashe'
Origin: active participle of 2790
in brass
nchosheth (Hebrew #5178)
copper, hence, something made of that metal, i.e. coin, a fetter; figuratively, base (as compared with gold or silver)
KJV usage: brasen, brass, chain, copper, fetter (of brass), filthiness, steel.
Pronounce: nekh-o'-sheth
Origin: for 5154
and iron
barzel (Hebrew #1270)
iron (as cutting); by extension, an iron implement
KJV usage: (ax) head, iron.
Pronounce: bar-zel'
Origin: perhaps from the root of 1269
: and the sister
'achowth (Hebrew #269)
a sister (used very widely (like 250), literally and figuratively)
KJV usage: (an-)other, sister, together.
Pronounce: aw-khoth'
Origin: irregular feminine of 251
of Tubal-cain
Tuwbal (Hebrew #8423)
offspring of Cain; Tubal-Kajin, an antidiluvian patriarch
KJV usage: Tubal-cain.
Pronounce: Qayin
Origin: apparently from 2986 (compare 2981) and 7014
was Naamah
Na`amah (Hebrew #5279)
pleasantness; Naamah, the name of an antediluvian woman, of an Ammonitess, and of a place in Palestine
KJV usage: Naamah.
Pronounce: nah-am-aw'
Origin: feminine of 5277
.