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Interesting biblical name. I like it.
Baruch is also the form used in the Latin Bible, i.e. the Vulgate. For example, see 1:1 of the Book of Baruch:http://www.latinvulgate.com/verse.aspx?t=0&b=30 (in English and Latin)
https://vulgate.org/ot/baruch_1.htm (in English and Latin)
• Clementine Vulgate (1592): https://vulsearch.sourceforge.net/html/Bar.html (in Latin)
• Nova Vulgata (1979): https://www.vatican.va/archive/bible/nova_vulgata/documents/nova-vulgata_vt_baruch_lt.html (in Latin) [noted -ed]
Baruch was the prophet Jeremiah's scribe. I love this name and its pleasant meaning. It could be the Hebrew name of someone who uses Benedict as his everyday, secular name.
Also Judeo-French: https://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/jewish/levy/baruch.html
Also Judeo-Anglo-Norman: http://heraldry.sca.org/names/jewish.html
Baruk ha ba b'sham Yahuah in Yahusha ha'Mashyach sham forever and ever. Amen.
May he be exalted above measure.
This name is pronounced "bah-ROOKH" or "BAH-rookh."
Pronouncing it with any other ending consonant (e.g. Bah-rook) is as incorrect as pronouncing the name Peter as Beter.
In the Catholic and Eastern churches, the book of Baruch is not apocryphal, but rather deuterocannonical. [noted -ed]
The pronunciation is bah-ROOCH, like in German, never bah-ROOK or anything else ending in a "k" sound. The final letter in hebrew is a final chaf, which always recieves a "ch" sound. For it to have a "k" sound it would have to end in koof, a completely different letter.
Baruch is the name of one of the angels in Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy.
It also parallels the Latin name "Benedictus". For example: the great philosopher Baruch Benedict d'Espinosa.
This name is pronounced bah-rookh in Hebrew.

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