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<font size="-1"><font face="Arial">I teach a class on the kings of
Judah and Israel, and last week we were talking about the structure of
Semitic names. Most Semitic names take the form stem-DN or DN-stem,
where DN is a divine name, and the stem is a noun, or a verb, or an
adjective. This is true of us as well as of other people who spoke
Semitic tongues. For us, usually the DN is either as in Dani<u><b>el</b></u>
or or Yirmi<u><b>yahu</b></u>. Sometimes a stem-DN name also appears
as DN-stem, the classic example being Yehoyachin king of Judah, who is
called Yechoniah in Megillat Esther.<br>
<br>
But there are three other DNs used in Jewish names. Or maybe not DNs,
but they serve the same purpose in the construction of names. These
are Av, Ach and Am, or father, brother and nation. We have Ammihud and
Rechavam, Achiezer and Avichayil. And I can understand how Av serves
as a DN, since Hashem is Avinu she'ba-shamayim. But the other two
puzzle me. And I wondered whether anyone here has ever come across any
discussion of names like that.<br>
<br>
As a cute bit of trivia, the name Rechavam (Rehoboam) is a Hebrew
cognate of Hammurabi. The DN "hammu" is usually translated by
Assyriologists as "the divine kinsman", but that's no good for us.<br>
<br>
Lisa<br>
<br>
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