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plural Abrahams
(Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Baha'i) A prophet in the Old Testament, Qur'an and Aqdas; a Semitic patriarch son of Terah who practiced monotheism, father of the Jewish patriarch Isaac by Sarah and the Arab patriarch Ishmael by Hagar. quotations examples
Neither ſhall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name ſhall bee Abraham: for a father of many nations haue I made thee.
1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], Genesis 17:5, column 2
As one would expect of caravan people around 1900 B.C., the caravan people depicted in the Khnum-hotpe grave had donkeys, whereas the Bible says that Abraham and his people, who according to the traditional interpretation are supposed to have lived at the same period, already possessed camels.
1980, Werner Keller, chapter 7, in William Neil, transl., The Bible as History, page 93
A male given name from Hebrew. quotations examples
"Lincoln wasn't a Jew, was he?" he said. "I'm sure not," I said. […] "The name Abraham is very suspicious, to say the least," said Goebbels. "I'm sure his parents didn't realize that it was a Jewish name," I said. "They must have just liked the sound of it. They were simple frontier people. If they'd known the name was Jewish, I'm sure they would have called him something more American, like George or Stanley or Fred."
1961, Kurt Vonnegut, Mother Night, Dell, published 1975, page 28
A surname originating as a patronymic. examples
The 14th sura (chapter) of the Qur'an. examples
(archaic, British slang, chiefly London) A shop selling cheap and low-quality clothes, especially in the East End of London.