Y'honatan - All About All

Search:  

Everything you wanted to know - online encyclopedia

See live article   •   Y'honatan
 

Jonathan (Redirected from Y'honatan)

Jonathan (יְהוֹנָתָן / יוֹנָתָן "Whom the LORD gave", Standard Hebrew Yonatan/Yəhonatan, Tiberian Hebrew Yəhônāṯān) was a prince of the Kingdom of Israel, son of King Saul, and beloved of the subsequent King David (see Jonathan and David). He was killed along with his father at the Battle of Mount Gilboa.

Jonathan was also the name of one son of Jada. See 1 Chronicles 2:32-33.

Jonathan is a common given name. Nicknames include Jon or Jonny/Jonni or Jonno and less frequently Nathan or Nate. Common alternative spellings of Jonathan include Jonathon, Johnathan, and Johnathon. The name became closely associated with all-American wholesomeness in the 1950's when it was frequently incorperated into song lyrics referencing romantic interests of the song's protagonist. ("Johnny Angel", "It's My Party")

Names with similar meanings include Theodore in Greek and Bogdan in Slavonic.

The Jonathan is also a variety of apple.

Brother Jonathan was a national personification of America, used mostly during the Revolutionary War but occasionally in the Civil War era. The character has been largely replaced by Uncle Sam.


Also helps finding: Yhonatan, onatan, hnatan, hoatan, hontan, honaan, honatn, honata, tonatan, yonatan, uonatan, gonatan, jonatan, jonothan, jonathen, jonthan, jonatha

   
 
  
Add to bookmarks
Top Articles
 
Animal
California
China
Football (soccer)
Japan
Latino (U.S. Census)
London
Mathematics
Politician
Population
Population density
Poverty line
Scientific classification
Second
Square kilometer
Square mile
Sweden
The Beatles
United States Navy
White (U.S. Census)
World War I
Search LiveJournal blogs for Y'honatan
 

Debt Consolidation  •  Credit Counseling  •  Cheap Computer Parts  •  Best Credit Card Deals •  Debt Consolidation

Copyright @ 2005 AllAboutAll.Info
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.