Ralph

Etymology
From, from (also as ), from , from. Reinforced by similar forms brought to England, e.g. 🇨🇬, then in the Norman form 🇨🇬,. For the sense relating to vomiting, see.

Proper noun

 * 1) * 1998 The Spectator, 7 March 1998, page 55 ("Dear Mary..."):
 * Regarding the correct pronunciation, especially of the name Ralph: according to a friend at the BBC, the possibilities of this name - either aristocratic 'Rafe' or vulgar, almost Australasian 'Ralff' - lie in its potential for wilful mispronunciation against type. I saw him cast confusion into an over-confident studio guest by introducing him as . This was nothing to the consternation, almost disintegration of the personality, of the artistic, aloof actor brought on as  ('Fiennes', naturally, pronounced superbly).
 * He's outside calling Ralph [i.e. vomiting].
 * Regarding the correct pronunciation, especially of the name Ralph: according to a friend at the BBC, the possibilities of this name - either aristocratic 'Rafe' or vulgar, almost Australasian 'Ralff' - lie in its potential for wilful mispronunciation against type. I saw him cast confusion into an over-confident studio guest by introducing him as . This was nothing to the consternation, almost disintegration of the personality, of the artistic, aloof actor brought on as  ('Fiennes', naturally, pronounced superbly).
 * He's outside calling Ralph [i.e. vomiting].
 * He's outside calling Ralph [i.e. vomiting].
 * He's outside calling Ralph [i.e. vomiting].

Translations

 * Arabic: رَالْف
 * Bengali: র‌্যালফ
 * Bulgarian: Ралф
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 拉爾夫
 * Danish: Ralf
 * Esperanto: Rolfo
 * Estonian: Raul
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Georgian: რალფი, რაული, რუდოლფი
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Hebrew: ראלף
 * Italian: Raul
 * Japanese: ラルフ
 * Korean: 랄프
 * Latvian: Ralfs
 * Lithuanian: Ralfas
 * Persian: رالف
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: Raul
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Ралф
 * Roman:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: Ralf,
 * Thai: ราล์ฟ
 * Ukrainian: Ральф