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Dreama?
WDYTO Dreama, its either Greek or American and it means 'Joyous music'
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It's sounds tacky and made up to me. Maybe it's a real Greek name and someone in America made it up from Dream.
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It's Dream with an a. Really trendy and made-up.
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It's okay. I don't think it really means "joyous music," I'm pretty sure that it's just the English word "dream" with an -a. But my aunt's name is prn the same, but it's spelled Drema.
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Dreama, Starla, Darla, Oceane... they're all a little too... cutesy? ridiculous? I'm not sure what I'm trying to say. I can't imagine a person named this actually living up to it. You know?
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It is cute as a guilty pleasure type of name but I wouldn't use it personally. Also it would be English and not considered American. If that is what you meant. Considering English is the main language of America.
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I like Dream or Dreamer, but not Dreama, it looks made up.
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American isn't a language. =/And even if it were, Dreama would just mean "Dream" with an -a at the end. I highly doubt it means "joyous music" in Greek either, but I could be wrong.Anyway, Dreama reminds me of how one time when I was in sixth grade, this kid wrote a poem for my friend Gina, and one line went "All I do is dreama / About a girl named Gina". =P
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Ditto mBut it reminds me of "Dream a little dream of me" instead of your poem. But I agree entirely about the first part! I'm a skeptic, and after a quick google shows a random Baby Name site as the source, I'm even more skeptical.
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I agree with Tuesday, too.It reminds me of Dream a Little Dream of Me, too. I saw a CSI episode recently, where the suspect was a prostitute named Dreama for that song.

This message was edited 7/17/2007, 6:42 PM

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It just looks like Dream with an -a attached to the end so that it sounds like a name.
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I dont like it at all! Its NMS!
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