[Opinions] Cleopatra
Cleopatra means “glory of the father” and its been on my mind a lot today. I find it so beautiful. Do you think it’s over-ambitious or anything?
"People say nothing is impossible, but I do nothing all day."
Rate my personal name list please :) https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/217493
"People say nothing is impossible, but I do nothing all day."
Rate my personal name list please :) https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/217493
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I interpret the meaning basically like, 'celebration of this family's honor/power/history/greatness/fame'. I think it's fair to assume choosing that meaning's vain, but it's not necessarily shallow; I don't think it's worse than calling a kid Jr. And more likely I'd attribute its use to someone being a history nerd than to its literal original meaning.
Or, it's like Gloria but with less of a religious/Christian connotation, and I like Gloria. I'd also say it's like a funkier, more eccentric Cassandra / Alexandria.
I think I'm in the minority here in that I prefer Cleopatra to Cleo / Clio. It seems more grounded and personable.
I'm also a fan of Sosipatra; that's one I'd be fine with using, though would most likely prefer as a MN.
Or, it's like Gloria but with less of a religious/Christian connotation, and I like Gloria. I'd also say it's like a funkier, more eccentric Cassandra / Alexandria.
I think I'm in the minority here in that I prefer Cleopatra to Cleo / Clio. It seems more grounded and personable.
I'm also a fan of Sosipatra; that's one I'd be fine with using, though would most likely prefer as a MN.
This message was edited 5/6/2021, 10:56 AM
Cleone is neat.
Yes, a little too much