| Arie is the typical Dutch spelling. Look it up - very common name. |
OP here, appreciate the feedback. I honestly had NO idea that this was so strongly tied to being Jewish, and perhaps more importantly, that people would actually think I was extremely weird for naming my child that. Now rethinking my entire list as apparently I love Jewish names!!!! I guess I never really thought I needed to deliberately name my child within my "heritage" but sounds like most people are still affected by this....
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| Ari would make me think Jewish, but I also would get over it pretty quickly if you used it and you are not Jewish. I like it! And unlike others, I kind of like Arie better. But I knew a boy named Arie when I was young so I guess I have that association. Can't remember if he was Jewish or not. |
Ari is fine for a non-Jewish family. I don't recommend spelling it Arie. |
OP, name your son a name you love. Honestly doesn't really matter where it comes from. I'd be that most people know Ari as a Jewish name because of Entourage. |
| I am Jewish. I would 1000% assume a boy named Ari or Arie is Jewish. It's a VERY Jewish name. I think it's way more common for Jews to name their kids Connor these days (Irish name) than non-Jews to name their kids Ari or Moshe etc. Irish names have gone mainstream. I don't think Jewish names have (although some biblical Jewish names have, like Asher). Ari isn't quite as Jewish-sounding as like Moshe or Shlomo or Shaya, etc., but it's more Jewish than say, David or Eli. |
| Character played by Paul Newman in Exodus. |
I have an Ari and am not Jewish. I actually started a thread asking this same question almost 2 years ago (in Expectant Moms & a rather long one in Off Topic if you want to search). We knew our son would have some issues and wanted to give him a strong name - we loved that it means Lion and Brave. The feedback that I got was that it is Hebrew and actually used in a lot of non Jewish cultures. It has been great and we couldn't imagine another name for our little Lion .
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| Actually I do think Jewish names have gone mainstream: see the number one boys name for the las decade, Jacob. See also the rising popularity of Eli, Asher, Ezra, etc. I think it's fine to name your child Ari. |
| I Love it! It does make me think Jewish, but so many names are jewish I just don't see how it matters. DH wanted to use it for our second but it rhymes with my first name so I nixed it. Personally I like Ari. |
| ^ we are not Jewish by the way...as a PP said, I think people will get over it instantly if they even make the association to begin with. |
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People may get over it, but honestly many Jewish people will think it is a bit clueless or tacky. If you named your non-Jewish kid I would assume you had no Jewish friends and were not very cosmopolitan/educated. Same way I would feel if you named your daughter Tova or Aviva.
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+1 |
David is a Jewish name. Miriam is a Jewish name. Would a Gentile baby with either of those names seem clueless or tacky to you? Hebrew is a beautiful language. |
That's not really the point. The point is that Ari is heavily *ethnically* Jewish at the moment. David is not. Miriam moreso, but not as much as Ari. But do whatever you want - it's your right to name your kid whatever you want, but be fully informed as to how some people will hear it. |