Character Name
Deborah
Deborah Deborah projects decisive, practical authority — a woman who combines the wisdom of a prophet with the command presence of a general, inspiring confidence in those who have lost hope. Characters named Deborah are often natural leaders who emerge in crisis, possessed of an unsentimental clarity that cuts through confusion and mobilizes action.
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Famous characters named Deborah
No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.
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Related names
Judith
Biblical Hebrew · “From the Hebrew "Yehudit" meaning "woman of Judea" or "Jewish woman", the feminine form of "Yehudah" (Judah) whose name derives from the root "y-d-h" meaning to praise or give thanks. In the Deuterocanonical Book of Judith, she is the Jewish widow who seduces and beheads the Assyrian general Holofernes to save her city — one of the Bible's most dramatically heroic women.”
Miriam
Biblical Hebrew · “One of the oldest Hebrew names, with debated etymology — proposed meanings include "beloved" (from Egyptian "mry"), "bitter sea" (from Hebrew "mar" + "yam"), or "wished-for child". In the Hebrew Bible, Miriam is the sister of Moses and Aaron, a prophetess who led the women of Israel in song after the crossing of the Red Sea (Exodus 15:20-21).”
Hannah
Biblical Hebrew · “From the Hebrew "Ḥannāh" meaning grace, favour, or God's gracious gift, derived from the root "ḥ-n-n" meaning to be gracious. In the Hebrew Bible, Hannah is the mother of the prophet Samuel, whose moving prayer in the Temple (1 Samuel 1-2) after years of barrenness became a model of faithful, earnest prayer in Jewish and Christian tradition.”
Esther
Hebrew · “Likely derived from the Old Persian "stāra" meaning star, or possibly related to the Babylonian goddess Ishtar. In the Hebrew Bible, Esther (also called Hadassah) is the Jewish queen of Persia who risks her life to save her people from genocide, becoming the subject of the Book of Esther and the festival of Purim.”
More Biblical Hebrew names
Malachi
“From the Hebrew "Mal'akhi" meaning "my messenger" or "my angel", from "malak" (messenger, angel) — the same root as Arabic "malak". Malachi is the last of the Hebrew prophets in the canonical ordering of the Hebrew Bible, his name meaning that his book's message is the final divine message of the prophetic era before a long silence.”
Rebekah
“From the Hebrew "Rivkah" whose etymology is uncertain — proposed meanings include "to tie firmly", "snare" or "to bind", or possibly from a root meaning "to captivate" or "beautiful". In the Hebrew Bible, Rebekah is the wife of Isaac, chosen through an elaborate test of character at a well, and the mother of Jacob and Esau — a decisive figure who engineers Jacob's blessing over his older brother.”
Isaac
“From the Hebrew "Yitzchak" meaning "he will laugh" or "he laughs", from the root "tz-ḥ-q" meaning to laugh. In the Hebrew Bible, Isaac's name commemorates the laughter of his elderly parents Abraham and Sarah when they were told they would have a child — laughter of disbelief that became laughter of joy, making his name a permanent memorial to the miracle of his birth.”
Jonah
“From the Hebrew "Yonah" meaning dove, a bird symbolizing peace, gentleness, and the divine spirit. In the Hebrew Bible, Jonah is the prophet who flees from God's command, is swallowed by a great fish for three days, and is ultimately sent to preach repentance to the Assyrian city of Nineveh — a story of divine persistence in the face of human reluctance.”
Hannah
“From the Hebrew "Ḥannāh" meaning grace, favour, or God's gracious gift, derived from the root "ḥ-n-n" meaning to be gracious. In the Hebrew Bible, Hannah is the mother of the prophet Samuel, whose moving prayer in the Temple (1 Samuel 1-2) after years of barrenness became a model of faithful, earnest prayer in Jewish and Christian tradition.”
Amos
“From the Hebrew "Amos" meaning "carried" or "borne by God" — the passive participle of the root "a-m-s" meaning to carry or bear a load. In the Hebrew Bible, Amos was a shepherd-prophet from Tekoa who, without formal prophetic training, delivered some of scripture's most forceful indictments of social injustice and religious hypocrisy in 8th-century BCE Israel.”
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