Cephas

See also: Céphas

English

Etymology

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

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsi.fəs/

Proper noun

Cephas

  1. The apostle Peter, using the name given to him by Jesus.
  2. A male given name from Aramaic 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 noun (masculine, Greek-type, nominative singular in -ās).

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