Re: Aaron or Aron (more)
in reply to a message by Llewella
Thanks, it's nice that you see colors when you think of names, I hoped someone would :) I actually have the feeling it will leave the top 100, like Rachel and Rebecca did. It's not even in the top 50 now and is slowly falling. I do agree that it will always be a classic and it will age well.
It actually surprises me that biblical names like Aaron, Caleb weren't that common in the early 1900s, I was reading the book and then looked the names up here and neither Aaron nor Caleb were in the top 100.
I was wondering, because Aron is the spelling used in Scandinavian countries. I wonder if it's spelled Aron in their translation of the Bible. I also wonder whether the Hebrew spelling indicates the double As and how it is pronounced there. I like both Aaron and Aron, Aron to me is calm, intelligent and serious while Aaron is happy, carefree, outgoing.
It actually surprises me that biblical names like Aaron, Caleb weren't that common in the early 1900s, I was reading the book and then looked the names up here and neither Aaron nor Caleb were in the top 100.
I was wondering, because Aron is the spelling used in Scandinavian countries. I wonder if it's spelled Aron in their translation of the Bible. I also wonder whether the Hebrew spelling indicates the double As and how it is pronounced there. I like both Aaron and Aron, Aron to me is calm, intelligent and serious while Aaron is happy, carefree, outgoing.