Meaning
Usage
Pronunciation
Famous
Impression
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As a patronymic, it is Abramovich (male) and Abramovna (female)
Also Niçard: http://www.sourgentin.org/cours-de-nissart/les-prenoms/
Also Provençal: https://ieo-oc.org/spip.php?page=article&id_article=290 --- Source: Institut d'Estudis Occitans
Allegedly also Polish: https://pl.wiktionary.org/wiki/Abram#pl
The name Abram is also in use in Georgia. It usually is the modern form of Abraham there, but there are also cases where Abram is the Georgian form of 'Abram' ("high father"). That means that in those cases, it comes from a different name than 'Abraham' ("father of many").Anyway, in Georgian, Abram is written as: აბრამ. [noted -ed]
Pronounced as it is written, A-bram (not, for example, Ay-bram or Ah-bram). It is not widely used.
Love it. Being Jewish and of Russian descent it seems all too perfect.

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