English edit

Etymology edit

From the Hebrew יוֹנָה (yonáh, dove). Doublet of Jonas.

Pronunciation edit

  Jonah on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  Jonah on Wikisource.Wikisource
Wiktionary has an Appendix listing books of the Bible

Proper noun edit

 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Jonah

  1. A male given name from Hebrew.
    • 2010, Maggie O'Farrell, The Hand That First Held Mine, Headline, →ISBN, page 165:
      'It's Jonah,' Ted says.
      Simmy considers this. 'As in the whale?'
      'Yep.'
      'You know,' Simmy says, 'that people are going to say that to him for ever more?'
      'What? The whale thing?'
      'Yes.'
      Ted shrugs again. 'Well. He'll get used to it. All names have got some associations. Anyway, he looks like a Jonah. And I like the name Jonah—'
      'Obviously,' Simmy cuts in, 'since you chose it.'
  2. (biblical) A minor prophet who was cast into the sea and swallowed by a great fish.
  3. A book of the Old Testament and the Hebrew Tanakh.
  4. The 10th sura (chapter) of the Qur'an.

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Translations edit

Noun edit

Jonah (plural Jonahs)

  1. (nautical, slang) A person who brings a ship bad luck.
    • 2008, Richard Blake, Evangelicals in the Royal Navy, 1775-1815: Blue Lights & Psalm-singers:
      Superstitious sailors regarded a clergyman as an unlucky shipmate, a Jonah whose presence would never be welcome.
  2. (slang, by extension) Any person or object which is deemed to cause bad luck; a jinx.
    • 1979, John Le Carré, Smiley's People, Folio Society, published 2010, page 61:
      ‘My first agent, and he's dead. It's incredible. I feel like a complete Jonah.’

Translations edit

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

References edit

  • J. van der Schaar, “Woordenboek van voornamen”, Utrecht, Antwerpen 1964, Aula-boeken 176, Uitgeverij Het Spectrum

Anagrams edit

Cebuano edit

Etymology edit

  A user has added this entry to requests for verification(+)
If it cannot be verified that this term meets our attestation criteria, it will be deleted. Feel free to edit this entry as normal, but do not remove {{rfv}} until the request has been resolved.

From English Jonah, from Hebrew יוֹנָה (yonáh, dove).

Proper noun edit

Jonah

  1. a male given name from Hebrew
  2. a female given name from Hebrew