Héri
In the Faroe Islands, Héri appears in the Flateyjarbók, a history written around 1380, in which Heri Sigmundsson is the youngest son of Sigmundur Brestisson. Heri is a common name in the Faroes today, probably not surviving as a traditional name, but revived and put into use again in later times from historical accounts like Flateyjarbók. Héri may mean "hare" (lepus europaeus), for which the modern Icelandic name is Héri. Alternatively, Héri may be an abbreviation of Norse names beginning with Her-, like Herálfur, Herleifur, or Hergeir.
Pronunciation | "Here-e" |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Origin | |
Word/name | Flateyjarbók |
Meaning | Hare |
Region of origin | Faroese |
Look up Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/harjaz in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Héri or Heri is a male given name.
People
- Heri Dono (born 1960), Indonesian artist
- Heri Joensen (born 1973), Faroese musician
- Heri Martinez de Dios (born 1964), Puerto Rican educator
- Heri Saputra (born 1989), Indonesian football player
gollark: It doesn't matter. What I'm trying to get at here is that I don't see why you privilege the actual point at which an egg becomes fertilized that much, if your argument is just about potential to become another thing, since almost identical potential exists immediately before that.
gollark: Again, why? Before an egg is fertilized, there must necessarily exist some point at which it wasn't yet but that was likely to happen soon.
gollark: Does that matter? They're still ultimately quite likely to produce a zygote and then quite likely to produce a fetus and whatever else after that.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Probably wouldn't work very well otherwise.
See also
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