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[Facts] Brielle
One of my favourite girl names is Brielle, but I'm having trouble finding the actual meaning and origin. BtN has is only as a short form of Gabrielle. I love Gabrielle, but dislike the nn Gabby. Can anyone help??Some other sites' meanings of the name:French, Exalted Goddess (www.baby-names-world.com) and (www.babynames.com)
Irish, Hill (www.weddingvendors.com)
French, Region in France (www.bubbaboo.com)See my problem?? Can anyone help me with the meaning/origin? I know there’s a place in France called Brielle, and also Brie cheese, but where did it originate??Thankyou!!!Mika
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Hill in Irish is cnoc so you can ignore that on straight off (let's pause for a moment and consider how much WEDDING VENDORS are going to know about etymology....I swear I'm just waiting for schooldinnerladies.com to put their list of baby names up on the web)Exalted Goddess. Am I the only one who has noted that names meaning 'princess' and 'goddess' and 'strong warrior' and such have really taken off since Marlo Thomas did that ridiculous I'm Okay You're Okay book in the 70's? Names that meant 'mud' for centuries now have to mean something like 'Famous and Sensitive Warrior!' Okay...goddess (uncapitalised unless you're refering to a monotheistic Goddess) in French is déesse, exalted is élevée or for a female person, haut placée. So 'exalted goddess' in French is 'déesse haut placée' which bears a remarkable non-resemblance to Brielle.There's Brielle in Brittany and Brielle in Netherlands, originally Briel. Brielle in Brittany is near one Brie but there are others and the Brittany one isn't the famous cheese-maker, that originally came out of Picardie, east of Paris. Not to say that the good people of Brie in Brittany aren't now producing cheese to cash in on their auspicious town name, just that I don't know if they are and I know that's not where the tradition of Brie originated.And the elements of Gabriel are bisected in Brielle - 'of God' would be as close as you can get but it's not exactly correct. Will do though.Devon
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thanks a lot Devon!!mto
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Yes, Brielle is a short form of Gabrielle. Personally, I do not like Gabrielle (I also dislike the nn Gabby, which is probably the reason I dislike it), but I really love Brielle. Just so you know, babynames.com isn't a reliable site - a lot of their names are made up origins and meanings so I would advise if you want a real meaning, go to a site that breaks it up in its orignal language (this website does that for many names). According to the Bible, where the name Gabriyel (the original form of Gabriel/Gabrielle) comes from, the name is Hebrew and means "strong man of God." Because that is the origin of the name, I would assume this is the actual meaning. Not to say that I do not believe that other languages have similar-sounding names with very different meanings, but I have not yet found a reliable source with a different meaning and origin.
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I know babynames.com isn't reliable. I just though I'd compare what they had to others. ;)
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