Ejigayehu?
I just got a letter saying that my new sponsor child is a girl named Ejigayehu from Ethiopia.
Any idea how to pronounce that?
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Thanks for everything, guys! ...-very helpful, that-
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As far as I understand, it is pronounced e-djee-dju-YAY-hoo but may also be e-djee-dju-YAH-hoo. See the Key here http://www.behindthename.com/pronunciation.phpAnd no, its not related to Hezekiah. Yehu definitely means "Jehovah is He" but Ejiga is a Igala word from Nigeria that means "peacesetter." It may be used as a female name or a surname.

This message was edited 10/15/2014, 11:14 PM

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It would seem to me highly unlikely that an Igala word from Nigeria would be part of the name of an Ethiopian child. Nigeria and Ethiopia are about 2500 miles (4000 km) apart across a wartorn part of Africa. How would parents in Ethiopia -- especially parents poor enough to have a child end up in an international foster program -- ever have heard of a name from a language spoken in south central Nigeria, much less have linked it to a name in their own language to create a name for their daughter?
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The name was originally used by the Igala and the Idomas adopted the name. The name is also found in Kenya, which is directly southwest of Ethiopia. So, somehow the name has travelled. According to a submission of the name to this site, it originally began as Ejiga and was a name frm the Kogi state of central Nigeria. It doesn't seem to be a very popular name, at least via locatemyname.com which lists 33 in Nigeria, 7 in the UK, 1 in Kenya, and an unstated number in other locations. Egija means pacesetter in regards to an Igala proverb which talks about how if Egija "does not lead the way who will carry the ritual basket?"The most popular woman with the name Ejigayehu Shibabaw, who is an Ethiopian singer that goes by the diminutive "Gigi," was named with Ejiga as a prefix and Yehu added as a suffix in a nod to her upbringing in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahed church, which has congregations in all of the aforementioned locations. I'm not saying it is fact, because I am unsure, but it is possible that the name Egija travelled as a popular name throughout the congregants of the church and when her parents named her Ejigayehu, fans followed with the use. Just as kids (yes, even super poor ones) in Africa have heard of Michael Jackson (Michael Jordan used to be the popular one, so I wonder who it is now), its likely that they have heard of popular singers on their own continent.
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Agreed - it seems a fairly popular Ethiopian name, why wouldn't it be Amharic?Can't confirm for sure as I have no knowledge of Ge'ez script or Amharic, but this page on Ethiopian names gives the meaning as 'I saw much':
http://ethiopia.limbo13.com/index.php/ethiopian_names/ethiopian_names_e/
and another page on wikipedia for the name Alemayehu gives a translation of 'ayehu' as 'I have seen', as some corroboration:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alemayehu

This message was edited 10/24/2014, 10:00 AM

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I do not know Amharic either, but according to unicode tables, a dictionary and a grammar of Amharic (all on the web)እጅግ (e-je-ge) Very
አየ ('a-ya) perfective stem for things like see, look, perceive, etc.
ሁ (hu) ist person simple past suffix, no prefixNow, I do not even know enough grammar to figure out whether the suffix is to be applied to the perfective stem or whatever that thing is.For people who know Amharic, how wrong did I get that?And more interestingly, how is that for zero-knowledge scholarship with big data? Should I start marking these as ZKS :-)?
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QuoteShould I start marking these as ZKS :-)?
That, or SWAG. ;-)
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The "g" seemed like it had to be hard since it was followed by an "a". That would have put it close to Hezekiah, particularly if the "j" was used for the "zh" sound.
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I don't know Ethiopian pronunciation, but that name looks (to me) like a variant of HEZEKIAH.

This message was edited 10/15/2014, 7:40 AM

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