[Facts] Re: Eimar
in reply to a message by CJ
Where did you find this name in this spelling? What is the gender of the person who bore it?
As this site says, Eimear is a modern Irish, and Eimhir a modern Scottish, form of an ancient Irish female name, Emer, which is possibly from a word that meant "swift". Eimear is pronounced as "EE- mur".
German Names by Hans Bahlow lists Eimer as a modern German surname derived from the ancient Germanic male given name "Aginmar", which combined words that meant "sword point" and "famous". Eimer would be pronounced something like "EYE-mer".
So if Eimar is a female name, it might be a spelling variation of Emer or Eimear and so is Irish. If it's a male name, it might be a spelling variation of Eimer and so is German. But in either case, we'd have to have more information about just where you found the name to be sure.
As this site says, Eimear is a modern Irish, and Eimhir a modern Scottish, form of an ancient Irish female name, Emer, which is possibly from a word that meant "swift". Eimear is pronounced as "EE- mur".
German Names by Hans Bahlow lists Eimer as a modern German surname derived from the ancient Germanic male given name "Aginmar", which combined words that meant "sword point" and "famous". Eimer would be pronounced something like "EYE-mer".
So if Eimar is a female name, it might be a spelling variation of Emer or Eimear and so is Irish. If it's a male name, it might be a spelling variation of Eimer and so is German. But in either case, we'd have to have more information about just where you found the name to be sure.
Replies
Thank you for your answer.
I saw it by coincidence in the film "The Addams Family." Morticia was strolling in the family graveyard with Uncle Fester and mentioned "poor uncle Eimar" to him. So it's about a male name in this case. It was pronounced as EYE-mahr, too.
I saw it by coincidence in the film "The Addams Family." Morticia was strolling in the family graveyard with Uncle Fester and mentioned "poor uncle Eimar" to him. So it's about a male name in this case. It was pronounced as EYE-mahr, too.
It seems the Germanic name Aimar, variant of Aimard/Haimard, that has been also documented as Heimard (in Förstemann's book, for example), coming from the Germanic elements haim/heim, "house", and hard, "hard, strong".