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עקיבא

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Aramaic

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Proper noun

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עֲקִיבָא (ʿăqīḇām

  1. a male given name, Akiva
    • c. 44 BCE–274 CE, Gottheil, Richard (1900) “Seven Unpublished Palmyrene Inscriptions”, in Journal of the American Oriental Society[1], number 21, page 111
      𐡰𐡳𐡩𐡡𐡠 / 𐡡𐡴 𐡰𐡶𐡰𐡳𐡡 / 𐡢𐡴𐡡𐡠 / 𐡧𐡡𐡫
      עקיבא / בר עתעקב / גרבא / חבל
      ʿqybʾ / br ʿtʿqb / grbʾ / ḥbl
      ʿəqīḇā / bar ʿəṯēʿəqaḇ / gārəḇā / ḥəḇāl
      Aḳiba / Son of Athe-Aḳab / the leper. / Woe!
  2. Rabbi Akiva ben Joseph, a major figure in Jewish history, a tanna of the late first century and early second century who contributed to the Mishnah and Midrash Halakha

Hebrew

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Etymology

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From Aramaic עֲקִיבָא (ʿăqīḇā).

Proper noun

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עֲקִיבָא (akíva, ʿăqīḇām

  1. a male given name, Akiva
  2. Rabbi Akiva ben Joseph, a major figure in Jewish history, a tanna of the late first century and early second century who contributed to the Mishnah and Midrash Halakha

See also

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Yiddish

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Etymology

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From Aramaic עֲקִיבָא (ʿăqīḇā), likely through Hebrew עֲקִיבָא (akíva, ʿăqīḇā).

Proper noun

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עקיבא (akivem

  1. a male given name, Akiva
  2. Rabbi Akiva ben Joseph, a major figure in Jewish history, a tanna of the late first century and early second century who contributed to the Mishnah and Midrash Halakha

See also

[edit]