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Nicole and Harmony as names
Actually, Ms. Chrisell, the name Harmony is an adaption from the name Harmonia, which in Greek, was a princess and the daughter of Aphrodite and Ares, and the wife of Cadmus. In Latin, harmonia was a word with several different meanings. I am a linguist and a historian and I believe I know what I am talking about. Nicole has been used for quite awhile in many forms, such as Nicholas and Nicolette. And I also believe what this lady wants to know is the actual history of the name, not how popular it is.
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Nice try, but . . .. . . it's funny that a linguist who happens to be using the exact same computer as you would come along right at this moment, isn't it?If you knew all that, why did you bother asking us? Besides, that's the history of the name Harmonia, NOT Harmony. They're related but their geographical usage is of significant enough difference to warrant different historical investigations. And you asked about Nicole itself, not all derivatives of nikolaos.And, for your information, I am an archaeologist and historian with two university degrees, and I got 100% in more than one linguistics assignment in first-year university. So don't pull the "holier than thou" approach, it's falling on quite oblivious ears.
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Curious now. When did Nicole first appear?It ranked in the 1940s... I'm really, really curious.Siri
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Well...http://snipurl.com/c8ll, says Nicol (a unisex vernacular form of Nicholas) appeared sometime between 1450 and 1650. Nichole is, interestingly, listed as a variant. (Nicholet is listed as a male pet form of Nicholas--it could to be the forerunner of the feminine Nicolette.)http://snipurl.com/c8ln gives more specific dates. Note that Nicholaa / Nicolaa was probably just a Latinisation, used only on documents. In fact, I wonder if Nicola itself is a Latinisation here, the vernacular form being, again, Nicol.Though both of these sites are for English (as in England) usage, it wouldn't be unreasonable to suggest that Nicole could've been used that far back in France.And indeed, Edgar's Name Pages (http://snipurl.com/c8lr) says that while Nicol was only "occasionally" used in England, Nicole and Nicola were "fairly popular" in France and Italy respectively. It's a worded a bit badly, but I'm under the assumption that ENP's meant that Nicole / Nicola were used at the same time as Nicol was being used in England: the Middle Ages.So it seems that Nicole's probably been in use since perhaps the 1400s, but only became really popular in the 20th century.Miranda (who likes Nicolet, Nicolin, and Nicol / Nichol for a boy now)
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Why are you talking to yourself Nicole/John?
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