Comments (Usage Only)

Also Basque, pronounced /es̺.ˈteɾ/
Also Corsican: http://projetbabel.org/bibbia_corsa/index.php?cor=Ester&fra=
https://co.wiktionary.org/wiki/EsterPronunciation: /esˈtɛɾ/
Also Afrikaans: https://af.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ester_(Bybel)
Also Maltese: https://mt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ester
https://mt.wiktionary.org/wiki/Ktieb_EsterPronunciation: /ɛsˈtɛɾ/
With 68 260 bearers, Ester is the 9th most common name in Israel (2014 Data).Source: https://forebears.io/forenames/ester
Multiple sources define the given name Ester as gender-neutral.Sources: https://www.names.org/n/ester/about
https://forebears.io/forenames/ester
Also Judeo-Anglo-Norman.
Source: Seror, Simon "Les noms des femmes juives en Angleterre au Moyen Âge".
Also Slovene: https://sl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ester_(ime)
Also Estonian: https://et.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ester_(eesnimi) [noted -ed]
This name is also used in Estonia.
Add Usage: German, EnglishPronounced: ehs-TEHR (Spanish), EHS-tehr (Italian, Czech), EHS-teh (Swedish), EHS-du (Danish), EH-stehr (Finnish), EHS-tər (English)
In the past century, this name was also given to boys. Well probably because the er sound in the name Ester makes it sound masculine. I’ll still agree with its feminism, however any name can be unisex since you can name your child whatever you want. Like naming your son Tianna. LOL!
Also used in Catalan: http://www.idescat.cat/noms/?q=ESTER [noted -ed]
Also Italian. [noted -ed]
The name is also used in Iceland. [noted -ed]
Ester is also Czech, Slovak and Polish form.
Pronounced as "EHS-tur".
Name Day: 19th December (Czech) and 12th April (Slovak).

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