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2006-08-27 09:55:01 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

4 answers

There's an English Arem, too. Alternative spellings include:
Harm, Harme, Harms, Harmes, Arm, Arme, Arms, Armes.

It is originally biblical:

• Aram (Gen 10:22)
1) Son of Shem, son of Noah (Gen10:22); 2) Son of Kemuel, son of Nahor with Milca (Gen 22:21); 3) Son of Shemer, son of Heber, son of Beriah, son of Asher, son of Jacob with Zilpah (1 Chr 7:34).
Supposedly from (rum 2133) meaning to be high, rise up. Jones reads High, Elevated. NOBSE reads Elevated.
However, there is an assumed root ('rm 164) that, according to BDB, may indeed have something to do with the word (rum 2133) and which is identical to our name. The meaning of the root was lost over the ages, but a derivation stands to this day: ('armon 164a), citadel, palace. The use of this word is largely limited to the message that God will burn up the various "palaces" of certain nations. Palaces were typically built on elevations, but symbolically they denoted the capital of nations, their apices.

A biblical name; Aram was also one of St. Vartan's fellow saints in the Battle of Avarayr in 451 AD. Pronounced: A'-ram

There is also a Zoroastrian meaning for this name:

ÂRAMAITI occurs for full 40 times in the Gathas and three times in the Haptanghaiti, the subtle and sublime supplement next in importance to the Gathas. While some modern scholars equate it with the Sanskrit "aramati -- readiness to serve, obedience, devotion," FROM "ARAM -- READILY," there are some who accept the Pahlavi translation on linguistic basis, to mean "ara -- right + maiti -- thinking and render it as "perfect-mindedness, noble-mindedness." Incidentally, the Rig Veda has another "aramati" meaning "without repose" ("a -- prefix of negation + ramati -- repose," see below). No one has gone for this.


It is a very rare name with this spelling. Usually the letters have been transposed, so it would be arme, not arem.

2006-08-28 01:49:33 · answer #1 · answered by graytrees 3 · 0 0

Ayaka Aiko Eiko Emiko Hisaki Hikari Misaki Miyumi Yumi Kuno Mirai Karen Kumiko Sakura Luna Aya Yuiko Hinata Hana Mizuho Ayaho Sakurako Riko Yuka Yuuka Kazuko Miyuki Minami Yuki Haruka Momoka Fuuko Anzu Keiko Kirara

2016-12-11 16:17:52 · answer #2 · answered by miracle 4 · 0 0

Is it a first name or last, and do you know what ethnicity? The name Aram means "calm" in Kurdish and that is the closest name to yours that I could find. Good luck.

2006-08-27 10:00:55 · answer #3 · answered by Do it yourselfer 2 · 0 0

It means you have something stuck in your throat,sometimes you have to repeat a few times to dislodge.

2006-08-27 10:04:05 · answer #4 · answered by frank m 5 · 0 1

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