Sarai
I've always had a soft spot for the name Sarai. It means "my princess" in Hewbrew and was the name of Sarah before God changed it in the Bible.
What are your opinions on it?
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Mommy to
☆★Will★☆
♡♥Katie♥♡
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What are your opinions on it?
imgur.com" />
Mommy to
☆★Will★☆
♡♥Katie♥♡
♥♡Lizzie♡♥
Replies
I really want to like it, but I can't help but think 'psoriasis' when I say it.
It's better than duller-than-dirt Sarah, but it sounds too prissy for my liking.
Absolutely beautiful. One of my favorite middle name ideas if only for the fact that in my region she would definitely be called Sarah forever and a day. Seems perfect in the middle spot to me though.
I love it, but I think if I had to choose a similar name it would be Sariah.
Hi!
Sarai is interesting but in Italian it's the second singular person literally meaning "you will be". That's why Sarai has never been used as a given name here. Then few people link it with Sara or the Bible. Biblical names are lesser used in Italy than U.S. except for the most famous ones. Sarai is obviously similar to Sara but it's not famous nor popular.
However Sarai could be interesting and refreshing in Italy because of its link with the future (the Italian meaning told above) as recently names such as Futura or Alba or Aurora are trendy. So..why not Sarai?
Sarai is interesting but in Italian it's the second singular person literally meaning "you will be". That's why Sarai has never been used as a given name here. Then few people link it with Sara or the Bible. Biblical names are lesser used in Italy than U.S. except for the most famous ones. Sarai is obviously similar to Sara but it's not famous nor popular.
However Sarai could be interesting and refreshing in Italy because of its link with the future (the Italian meaning told above) as recently names such as Futura or Alba or Aurora are trendy. So..why not Sarai?
This message was edited 2/18/2024, 6:05 AM
I mess with it. I wouldn't use it over Sarah, as a Jew, because Sarai and Avram are seen as "deadnames" in jewish tradition
What's your opinion about certain figures in the tradition that were less desirable to be named after? Like Jezebel, but could be considered someone less evil obviously. That was just the most obvious example that came to mind.
my opinion is that everyone can use whatever names they want. I like names like Absalom and even Cain, but I wouldn't use names that have become symbols for incest, fratricide or idolatry.
Just like I wouldn't use the name Paul, Peter or Zarathustra, because they symbolize a religious tradition that at best is not my religion, and at worst is directly opposed to mine.
Just like I wouldn't use the name Paul, Peter or Zarathustra, because they symbolize a religious tradition that at best is not my religion, and at worst is directly opposed to mine.
Fair enough
I was going to ask if you felt the same about Saul versus Paul but I forgot that that was in the New Testament / not applicable to you. I'm too far removed from my fundamentalist cult roots to remember the basics anymore lmao.
* I'm not saying all christians, or all religious people are cult members just so we're clear, I'm just saying that I specifically grew up in a religious cult rooted in Christianity)
* I'm not saying all christians, or all religious people are cult members just so we're clear, I'm just saying that I specifically grew up in a religious cult rooted in Christianity)
Very interesting! I didn't know there ws such a thing. Is it because their names were changed by God, so the original ones were unworthy and shouldn't be used?
yes. I'd preface this and say that Avraham and Sarah weren't popular names in Talmudic times at all, but one sage said "whoever calls Abraham (the biblical patriarch) Abram is tragressing an active commandment", as God says "your name shall not be called Abram anymore".
As such, jewish communities only used Abram as a nickname for Abraham, or in rare cases when one grandfather named Abraham died and the other grandfather was also named Abraham and he was alive (Ashkenazi jews don't name after the living), then they'd name the son Abram after the dead one.
As such, jewish communities only used Abram as a nickname for Abraham, or in rare cases when one grandfather named Abraham died and the other grandfather was also named Abraham and he was alive (Ashkenazi jews don't name after the living), then they'd name the son Abram after the dead one.
It's ok, I prefer Sarah