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Attn. Summer! In case you haven't noticed: I treid to answer your Sela/Zelah question (right at the bottom of this page) nt
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ThanksI did not see it yet. :)
An other question: are all these Sela/Zela/Shelah names used as first names, or only Selah and Sela?
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Use of SELA / ZELAH?You would have to ask someone like Noa.
Smadar Shir Sidi's "Complete Book of Hebrew Baby Names" (1989) lists:

SELA ("rock", samech-lamed-ayin) (m.)
SHELACH ("missile", shin-lamed-chet, to send) (m.)
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Thanks. Noa, do you know more about the use of Sela/Zela?
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You called?All I can say is that if they are used, they are very uncommon. I never met anyone with those names.My sister says she read about a girl who, when still nameless, was in a car accident and crashed on some boulders. Her parents died, and the orphanage decided to call her Sela after the cause of her parents' death. Depressing, if you ask me. Not that anyone would like to be called Sela now anyway - there was a rapist on the news not long ago with Sela as a surname.Shelach - I've never heard of used as a name.Both are as strange to me as calling someone Missile or Boulder (because a sela's more a boulder than a rock). They just aren't names to me, though some creative parents might use them (but there aren't creative parents here like those that are in America by the sound of it).
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Thanks, that's clear.
Very depressing indeed to be called after the cause of your parents death :S
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