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Rebekah

American  
[ri-bek-uh] / rɪˈbɛk ə /

noun

  1. the sister of Laban, wife of Isaac, and mother of Esau and Jacob. Genesis 24–27.


Etymology

Origin of Rebekah

From Late Latin Rebecca, from Greek Rhebékka, from Hebrew Ribhkāh , a personal name of uncertain origin

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

IGN's Rebekah Valentine also gave a thumbs-up to the main character, arguably one the more obscure Pokémon - "I love this little weirdo!" she wrote in her nine out of 10 review.

From BBC

When Rebekah Lee was in her twenties, she decided to embark on an ambitious climb up Mount Stuart in Washington State and "made a series of bad decisions".

From BBC

God is important, but so are Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and his two wives.

From The Wall Street Journal

The Lloyd’s probe focuses on the nature of Neal’s relationship with Rebekah Clement, until recently the director of corporate affairs at Lloyd’s, the people familiar with the matter said.

From The Wall Street Journal

The project's Rebekah Bensley-Mills said: "It's connecting people to advice for things like debt then looking at benefits, heating bills, water bills and how they are heating their house as well."

From BBC