Cephas

See also: Céphas

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin Cephas, from Ancient Greek Κηφᾶς (Kēphâs), from Aramaic כֵּיפָא (kēp̄ā, stone, rock).

Proper noun

Cephas

  1. The apostle Peter, using the name given to him by Jesus.
  2. A male given name of biblical origin.

Translations

Anagrams


Latin

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek Κηφᾶς (Kēphâs), from Aramaic כֵּיפָא (kēp̄ā, stone, rock).

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Cēphās m (genitive Cēphae); first declension

  1. The apostle Peter, using the name given to him by Jesus.

Declension

First declension, masculine Greek type with nominative singular in -ās.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative Cēphās Cēphae
Genitive Cēphae Cēphārum
Dative Cēphae Cēphīs
Accusative Cēphān Cēphās
Ablative Cēphā Cēphīs
Vocative Cēphā Cēphae

Descendants

  • Basque: Kepa
  • Catalan: Cefes
  • Czech: Kéfas
  • English: Cephas
  • Finnish: Keefas
  • French: Céphas
    • Haitian Creole: Sefas
  • German: Kephas
  • Hungarian: Kéfás
  • Italian: Cefa
  • Latvian: Kēfas
  • Polish: Kefas
  • Portuguese: Cefas
  • Romanian: Chifa
  • Spanish: Cefas
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