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Re: Agree but...
in reply to a message by Damis
Yes, I agree that Greek names travelled all over Europe, but the names that travelled were by and large those well-known from mythology or history. I studied Greek Mythology for one year and Greek Archaeology/Art and Architecture for onr year, and I never heard of an Ada, so it seems she was an obscure character whose name might not have the same travelling power as, say, Cassandra or Alexander.I didn't mean quite what you thought with the "set of syllables" thing - all names are sets of syllables, whether those syllables have independent meanings or not. What I meant was that the two syllables 'ay' and 'da' are found in most languages, so it's not surprising that the combination of the two as a feminine name is found in more than one language.I didn't say anything about Ayda - AY-da is the phonetic transcription of the pronunciation of Ada.
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Thanks for the reply.I hope you understand that I don't mean that any name that sounds like a Greek name, it has actually came from Greek. I would be at least silly if I do that! All I want to do is think and search and ask people's opinion about different options on the etymology. Thats why I started my first post as: "Could ADA not be a short for ADELAIDE?" and not as: "ADA is a short for ADELAIDE"!Anyway, thats what is all about, find the truth through dialogue, sensible thinking and research, isnt it? :0)
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I agree that both meanings should be placed in.
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