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      • According to the Torah, the name "Moses" comes from the Hebrew verb, meaning "to pull out/draw out" [of water], and the infant Moses was given this name by Pharaoh's daughter after she rescued him from the Nile (Exodus 2:10) Since the rise of Egyptology and decipherment of hieroglyphs, it was postulated that the name of Moses, with a similar pronunciation as the Hebrew Moshe, is the Egyptian word for Son, with Pharaoh names such as Thutmose and Ramesses roughly translating to "son of Thoth " and...
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses_(given_name)
  1. The obvious question is, is the nameMosesHebrew or Egyptian? At first glance, the verse seems to be using a Hebrew etymology, implying that it is a Hebrew name. But how would Pharaoh's daughter Bithiah even know Hebrew, let alone give the child a distinctly Hebrew name?

  2. Moses (Greek: Μωϋσῆς), [NB 1] Moishe (Yiddish: משה), [NB 2] Moshe (Hebrew: מֹשֶׁה), [NB 3] Musa (Arabic:موسی), [NB 4] or Movses (Armenian: Մովսես) [NB 5] is a male given name, after the biblical figure Moses.

    • God Accepts The Name
    • Yocheved Named Him Moshe: Hizkuni and Abarbanel
    • The Meaning of Moses’ Name in Egyptian: Philo and Josephus
    • What Moses’ Name Actually Means
    • Popular Etymologies in The Bible

    The Sages in Leviticus Rabbah (ca. 5th cent.C.E.) were sensitive to the fact that this greatest of all Israelite prophets was named by an Egyptian woman, whom they name Bitya (based on 1 Chronicles 4:18), meaning “Daughter of Yah [God],” and thus, they explain that God specifically approved of her and her choice of name (Levitcus Rabbah1):

    Despite the straightforward meaning of what the biblical verse says, several medieval commentators suggest that Yocheved, Moses’s mother, rather than Pharaoh’s daughter, gave Moses his name. The first traditional commentator to suggest this that I can identify is R. Hezekiah ben Manoah (13th cent. France) in his Hizkuni(ad loc.). ‍Hizkuni sees two ...

    The question of how Pharaoh’s daughter could have given Moses a Hebrew name bothered commentators since the Second Temple period. In his On the Life of Moses (c. 50 CE), the Greek Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria, noting that Moses had been taken up from the water, writes (#17): Philo attaches the name Moses, pronounced mouses (Μωυσῆς) in Gre...

    All of the above interpretations underline how problematic traditional commentators have found the idea that Pharaoh’s daughter could have given her adopted son a Hebrew name with a Hebrew etymology since she did not speak Hebrew. Contemporary scholarship, however, has opened up new paths with which to approach this problem. In modern times, Ancien...

    Classical commentaries were forced to make the etymology of Moses’ name as coming from the Hebrew verb moshe work, since they believed that the biblical account represented historical fact. Contemporary academic scholarship, however, has shown how the Bible often includes folk etymologies for names of people or places that do not reflect their more...

  3. The familiar name Moses is the Latin version of the Greek name Μωσης (Moses), which in turn is a transliteration of the Hebrew name משה (Moshe), which might ultimately be of Egyptian pedigree since Moses was named by the daughter of the Pharaoh of Egypt.

  4. Moshe is the name given by Pharaoh’s daughter to the infant that she “drew from the water,” since the Hebrew word for “drew him” (mishitihu) is linked with the word “Moshe.”.

  5. After the sin of the Golden Calf, G‑d told Moses that He intended to wipe out the Jewish people and rebuild His nation from him. In response, Moses asked G‑d to remove his name from the Torah.

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  7. Dec 22, 2021 · When Moses sees an Egyptian striking a Hebrew, he kills the Egyptian. Does Moses get involved because he knows he is a Hebrew or does he act out of a sense of justice?