Lucinda

Gender Feminine
Pronounced Pron. /lu.ˈsɪn.də/ (English) [key ·simplify]

Meaning & History

An elaboration of Lucia created by Cervantes for his novel Don Quixote (1605). It was subsequently used by Molière in his play The Doctor in Spite of Himself (1666).

Related Names

Rootlux
VariantsLucia (English) Lúcia, Luzia (Portuguese)
DiminutivesCinda, Cindy, Lulu, Sindy (English)
Other Languages & CulturesLucia, Lucilla (Ancient Roman) Lyusi (Armenian) Llúcia (Catalan) Lucija (Croatian) Lucie, Lucka (Czech) Lucia (Danish) Lucia, Luus (Dutch) Lucie, Luce, Lucette, Lucile, Lucille, Lucinde (French) Lucia, Luzia, Luzie (German) Loukia (Greek) Luca, Lúcia (Hungarian) Luce, Lucia, Lucetta, Lucilla (Italian) Lūcija, Sindija (Latvian) Liucija (Lithuanian) Lucia (Norwegian) Łucja (Polish) Lucia, Lucica (Romanian) Liùsaidh (Scottish Gaelic) Lucia, Lucka (Slovak) Lucija (Slovene) Lucía, Luz, Luci, Lucila (Spanish) Lucia (Swedish)

Popularity

People think this name is

classic mature formal upper class natural wholesome refined strange complex serious

Categories


AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /