Sorcha

Sorcha
Pronunciation SOR-SHA SURR(uh)khuh
Anglicised: sɔɾ'ʃə/ SOR-SHU
Gender Feminine
Language(s) 1. Irish
2. Scottish Gaelic
Origin
Meaning "light", "brightness"

Sorcha is a Gaelic feminine given name. It is common to both the Irish and Scottish Gaelic languages, and is derived from a Gaelic word meaning "brightness".

In Ireland, the name is often mistakenly considered as a Gaelic form of the etymologically unrelated name Sarah (a Biblical name, meaning "princess") due to the superficial similarity in pronunciation, especially in the common Anglophone pronunciation that approximates the Irish sound "x" ("kh") consonant not found in English with ʃ ("sh"), thus rendering the name as "SOR-SHU" or "SOR-SHA. As a consequence, Sorcha is also commonly Anglicised as Sally, the diminutive of Sarah.

In Scotland, Sorcha has been Anglicised as Clara, which retains the name's Gaelic meaning: the English Clara is derived from the Latin clarus, meaning "bright", "famous".[1]

The variant pronunciation of this name as "SURR-shuh" is commonly confused with both the masculine Seóirse (pronounced SHORE-shuh, equivalent to George) and the feminine Saoirse (SEER-shuh, a modern repurposing of the Irish vocabulary word for "freedom") by English speakers.

Notable people with the name Sorcha

See also

External links

References

  1. Hanks, Patrick; Hardcastle, Kate; Hodges, Flavia (2006), A Dictionary of First Names, Oxford Paperback Reference (2nd ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 57, 240, 356, 409, ISBN 978-0-19-861060-1