Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Noah

Meaning — From the Hebrew "Noach" meaning rest, comfort, or repose — derived from the root "n-w-ḥ" meaning to rest. In the Hebrew Bible, Noah is the righteous man chosen by God to build an ark and preserve life through the great flood, making his name synonymous with salvation, renewal, and a covenant between humanity and the divine.·Biblical Hebrew origin·Male·NOH-ah

Noah Noah evokes quiet righteousness and steadfast perseverance in the face of catastrophe. Characters named Noah tend to be portrayed as patient, methodical, and morally clear — the one person who continues doing what is right when everyone around them has abandoned the effort, often at great personal cost.

Best genres for Noah

Historical FictionFantasyReligious FictionLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Noah

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

NoahNoachNoeNuh

Pairs well with

Noah CohenNoah LeviNoah GoldsteinNoah ShapiroNoah KatzNoah Stern

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More Biblical Hebrew names

Tamar

From the Hebrew "Tamar" meaning date palm — a tree of great significance in the ancient Near East, representing beauty, uprightness, grace, and fertility. In the Hebrew Bible, Tamar appears as a figure of striking agency: the daughter-in-law of Judah who, disguised as a prostitute, secures her legal rights through her own bold action (Genesis 38).

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.

Gideon

From the Hebrew "Gideon" meaning "one who cuts down" or "mighty warrior", from the root "g-d-ʿ" meaning to cut or hew. In the Hebrew Bible, Gideon is the judge of Israel who, despite initial self-doubt, defeats a vast Midianite army with only three hundred men armed with torches, trumpets, and clay jars — a story of divine power working through human weakness.

Ruth

The etymology of the Hebrew "Rut" is uncertain, but proposed meanings include "friend", "companion", or "sight" (possibly from Hebrew "re'ut"). In the Hebrew Bible, Ruth is the Moabite woman who follows her mother-in-law Naomi back to Bethlehem with the declaration "Where you go I will go" — a story of extraordinary loyalty that became the foundation for Jewish conversion law.

Samson

From the Hebrew "Shimshon" meaning "sun" or "of the sun", possibly derived from "shemesh" (sun) — the name may connect to the sun's strength and brilliance. In the Hebrew Bible, Samson is the judge of Israel whose supernatural strength, bound to his uncut hair, is betrayed by Delilah, leading to his capture, blinding, and final act of destructive sacrifice.

Leah

From the Hebrew "Le'ah" whose etymology is debated — proposed meanings include "weary", "wild cow" (from Akkadian "littu"), or "mistress". In the Hebrew Bible, Leah is the elder daughter of Laban, who is given to Jacob as his wife through deception, while he loved her younger sister Rachel — her story explores themes of being the unloved wife who nevertheless bears the greater part of Jacob's legacy.


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