Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH

SI is usually J or G in names - since the alphabet does not contain a J.So if you changed Siobhan into Jobhan it gets a bit closer to the original. In the original, it is a Y rather than a J.Sometimes a name alternates between J, Y, I or nothing at the beginning.john, yochanan, yah=lord; chanan=gracious, merciful, to bestow, to show favour; kind to inferiors, cloud; +(-son); yochana=plot, plan, thought; jaun=lord; evan, leuan (welsh)=john, see Johnson; evan, eimhin, eim=prompt, ready, swift, active, quick;John names seem to be related to Hannah names, which explains the han in Siobhan.HANNAH - hannah, channah, anna=favour, grace; hann=grace; Hannah, hann-ah; hann=grace; -ah=feminine; chanan, charis, hanan=gracious; hanan=grace filled; hannah=gracious, merciful, he that gives;I'm trying to research Potter names so if anyone knows what Grawp or Snape or pigwidgeon really mean...
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Messages

Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  leelee  ·  2/22/2003, 2:00 PM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  Mhairi McAdam  ·  4/23/2004, 8:09 AM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  Eilidh  ·  1/19/2004, 8:08 AM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  siobhan  ·  6/29/2003, 7:20 PM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  Siobhan  ·  5/29/2003, 8:55 PM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  Siobhan  ·  3/17/2004, 11:51 PM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  siobhan  ·  5/14/2003, 3:48 AM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  vaudree  ·  12/2/2003, 11:32 PM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  Eleanor  ·  2/23/2003, 6:52 AM
Re: Meaning and Pronunciation IRISH/SCOTTISH  ·  eleri2  ·  2/22/2003, 6:59 PM