MARCUS
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Ancient Roman, English, Biblical (Variant)
Pronounced: MAHR-kus
Roman praenomen, or given name, which was probably derived from the name of the Roman god MARS. Two famous Roman bearers of this name were Marcus Tullius Cicero (known simply as Cicero), a statesman and orator, and Marcus Aurelius, a notable emperor of the 2nd century. This was also the name of a pope of the 4th century. Marcus is the original form of the name Mark.
There is no Hebrew name for Marcus.
Mars in Hebrew is Ma'adim.
Whats the hebrew name for marcus?
Marcus does not translate into Hebrew.
Marcus
P English meaning descendant of Marco. Italian form of Mark, which means belonging to the god, Mars, god of war, (Smith, 1988). Marcus as a surname would be a patronymic for son of Mark. Hans and Hodges state that Mark is in many cases an Anglicization of several like-sounding Jewish surnames (Hanks and Hodges, 1988).
Since Mark has also been an Askenazic surname in Eastern Europe, where English influence is out of the question, there must be at least one other explanation. Another explanation is that it is from the Yiddish masculine given name. Markus which is related to Marcus, a name of Latin origin borrowed from German.
Reply:As it's been said, Marcus is not a Hebrew name. If you would like to find an alternative, check out this website: http://www.my-hebrew-name.com/
If you would like it translitered into Hebrew (Marcus in Hebrew letters), it is 诪专拽讜住. This is read right-to-left. Hope this helps.
Reply:I dont know hebrew but id guess just say "marcus" and make kind of a choking sound between the MAR and CUS. hebrew kinda sounds like choking to me sometimes.
Like the "HK" sound in arabic...sounds like choking, theres a lot more of that in hebrew.
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