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Can a Jew name a child after a (deceased) non-Jew (non-relative)? Is there any prohibition against it?

msh210
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Meliorate
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    Related, but not duplicate: http://judaism.stackexchange.com/q/78/5323 (Matt's answer there comes highly recommended) – MTL Sep 08 '14 at 23:46
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    Consider the name Alexander which came from Alexander the great. Mordechai came from Marduk. Esther was a Hebraization of Ishtar. certain secular names were originally derived from Hebrew but people have forgotten that – sabbahillel Sep 09 '14 at 00:19
  • @sabbahillel http://judaism.stackexchange.com/q/41220/5323 – MTL Sep 09 '14 at 13:39
  • @sabbahillel - Such as "Toby" which is derived from "Tuvia." – ezra Oct 19 '17 at 03:00

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There appears to be no formalized halachic restriction on how to name a child. One commonality is not to name a child after a Jewish enemy, but I know of no halacha against doing so. (It would be weird to find a Jewish boy named Nebuchadnezzar :-) Besides it being a "nasty" name, it's too long. And, you wouldn't want to shorten it to "nebbish".)

Consider these examples:

Abram and Sarai were non-Jewish names. Is Yishma'el a "Jewish" name? Yet, we know of a Rabbi Yishma'el who is mentioned many times in the Talmud, as well as our morning davening.

Names such as Dov-Ber, etc. are named after animals. I know a few people having this name who were not named after anyone.

As @sabbahillel indicated, above, Alex(ander) is a popular name. Many German Jews named their sons Franz after Franz Joseph.

DanF
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