Meaning
Usage
Pronunciation
Famous
Impression
Other
Tecla is also used in Romanian.
Also the Portuguese form: https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tecla
Used in Brazil: https://www.ibge.gov.br/censo2010/apps/nomes/#/search/response/569
Tecla Tofano (1927, in Italy – 1995, in Venezuela) was a Venezuelan artist, ceramicist, and writer active from the 1950s until her death. Tofano studied ceramics and enamel with Miguel Arroyo at the Escuela de Artes Plásticas y Applicadas (School of Fine and Applied Arts, Caracas), alongside fellow students and ceramicists, Cristina Merchán and Reyna Herrera. A member of the cooperative Forma Veinte (Form Twenty), her works garnered wide acclaim, and she became known for her controversial, political, and feminist imagery.
Tecla Vigna (died April 1927) was an Italian opera singer and educator based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her vocal method was described as "distinctly Italian, and distinctly modern, and dramatic in the very best sense of the term."
Tecla Namachanja Wanjala (born 1962) is a conflict resolution, post-conflict rehabilitation, and development worker from Kenya. She was the Acting Chair of The Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission of Kenya.
Tecla Scarano (20 August 1894 – 22 December 1978) was an Italian actress and singer. She appeared in 34 films between 1937 and 1966. Born in Naples, the daughter of tenor Giovanni Moretti and operetta singer Anna Scarano, she started performing as a child actress at 9 years old and as a singer aged 10 years old. At fifteen years old, Scarano was already well known in Naples as a café-chantant singer and actress.
In Spanish, "tecla" is a word meaning key, on a piano or keyboard.
Spanish name pronounced TE-kla. [noted -ed]

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