Question:

Wolfram is an Irish name?

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Wolfram is an Irish name?

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9 ANSWERS


  1. No it's not. There is no 'w' in the Irish (Gaelic) alphabet.


  2. no - its liquid tungsten

  3. it s a germanic name. assumingly meaning "the woolf and crow from  Wodan. wolf = woolf and hraban = crow

    Wodan used to be the God of death and slaughter. He was riding a horse and was always escorted by a woolf and a crow. thats where the name comes from.

  4. Nope not Irish...German. Im no expert but my last name is Wolfram and it means tungsten, a metal on the periodic table of elements, #76, symbolized with a "W." Tungsten is the tiny filament in a lightbulb. Another tidbit of info...the spanish name for this  filament is "wolframita." Hope that helps. Also, I believe there is a city in Germany called Wolfram...

  5. NO!!!

  6. Sorry Wolfram is NOT an Irish name, either as a forname or a surname. It is not even a bastardisation of an Irish name. It sounds to me as if it may derive from Scandanavia.

  7. I thought it was an old name for (the metal ) Mercury.

  8. Nope...the name is actually English in origin, deriving from the old English word 'Wulfrun' ;-)

    But then again the English language is Germanic in origin, due to the Anglo Saxon invasion into Britain at the end of the Roman Empire, so you could say that the name has germanic roots also...

  9. Definetly not. It must be German or whatever.

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