Lior

"My light"

⚥ Unissex · Hebrew
light modern israeli hebrew unisex poetic

📖 Sobre Lior

Lior é um nome hebraico moderno que significa 'minha luz' — li (para mim, meu) + or (luz), primeira palavra do Gênesis ('haja luz'); uma declaração de amor na primeira pessoa codificada em um nome; usado para meninos e meninas em Israel, pertence a uma família de nomes hebraicos modernos íntimos que falam diretamente do pai para o filho.

📍 Detalhes

  • OrigemHebrew
  • Gênero⚥ Unissex
  • SignificadoMy light

🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados

⭐ Pessoas Famosas

  • Lior Ashkenazi — Israeli actor (born 1969), one of the most acclaimed performers in Israeli cinema; known internationally for his roles in Walk on Water (2004), Footnote (2011, which won the Best Screenplay Award at Cannes), and The Affair; his career spans theatre, film, and television and represents the finest tradition of contemporary Israeli dramatic acting.
  • Lior Suchard — Israeli mentalist and entertainer (born 1981), regarded as one of the world’s leading mentalists; known for his television appearances on shows including The Tonight Show and The Late Late Show, and for private performances for world leaders and celebrities; he was named ‘Mentalist of the Year’ by the international magic community.
  • Or (Hebrew 'light') — the root — The Hebrew word or (אור, light) is the first word of creation in Genesis 1:3, and one of the most theologically charged words in the Hebrew Bible; in Kabbalistic mysticism, Or Ein Sof (the Infinite Light) is the supreme manifestation of the divine; the root or appears in dozens of Hebrew names (Or, Ora, Orit, Orli, Orly, Lior, Liora, Liron) reflecting its centrality to Jewish spiritual thought.
  • Lior Ben David — Representative Israeli singer and performer bearing the name; Lior is popular across Israeli music, film, and arts communities, reflecting the name’s status as one of the most distinctively modern Israeli names — created from living Hebrew rather than borrowed from biblical tradition — and its appeal across Israel’s secular and traditional communities alike.