هارون

Arabic

Etymology

From Hebrew אהרן (aharon).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /haː.ruːn/

Proper noun

هَارُون • (hārūn) m

  1. Aaron (prophet)
    • 609–632 CE, Qur'an, 19:53:
      وَوَهَبْنَا لَهُۥ مِن رَّحْمَتِنَا أَخَاهُ هَـٰرُونَ نَبِيًّا
      wawahabnā lahū min rraḥmatinā ʔaḵāhu hārūna nabiyyan
      And We appointed for him—out of Our grace—his brother, Aaron, as a prophet.
  2. a male given name, Haroon, Harun, or Haroun, equivalent to English Aaron

Declension

Descendants

  • English: Harun
  • Bengali: হারূন (harūn)
  • Hausa: Haruna
  • Kazakh: Һарұн (Harūn)
  • Malay: Harun, Haron
  • Maore Comorian: Haruna
  • Ngazidja Comorian: Haruna
  • Persian: هارون (hârun)
  • Old Galician-Portuguese: Faaron
    • Portuguese: Faro, Fárão
  • Turkmen: Harun
  • Urdu: ہارون (harūn)

See also

Malay

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Arabic هَارُون (hārūn), from Hebrew אהרן (Ahărōn).

Pronunciation

Proper noun

هارون (Rumi spelling Harun or Haron)

  1. Aaron (biblical brother of Moses)
  2. Aaron; a male given name from Hebrew

Persian

Pronunciation

 
  • (Dari, formal) IPA(key): [hɑː.ɾúːn]
    • (Kabuli) IPA(key): [ʔɑː.ɾúːn]
    • (Hazaragi) IPA(key): [ʔɔː.ɾún]

Readings
Classical reading? hārūn
Dari reading? hārūn
Iranian reading? hârun
Tajik reading? horun

Proper noun

Dari هارون
Iranian Persian
Tajik Ҳорун

هارون • (hârun)

  1. (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) Aaron
  2. a male given name from Arabic [in turn from Hebrew], Harun, Haroon or Haroun
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