[Facts] Dessislava
Hello Mike,
My name is Dessislava, short Dessi. I come from Bulgaria.
It is wrong to spell my name Desislava because then it can't be pronounced correctly. Also you have to know that Dessislav comes from Dessislava, not the other way round because this name comes from the Bulgarian history, there was a queen named Dessislava, ever since this name is widely spread all over my country.
P.S. 90% of the people do not know how to spell Dessislava in English, 100% of the people have it spelled Desislava in their passports. I am going to change this because I would like to hear my name correctly pronounced.
With best regards,
Dessislava
My name is Dessislava, short Dessi. I come from Bulgaria.
It is wrong to spell my name Desislava because then it can't be pronounced correctly. Also you have to know that Dessislav comes from Dessislava, not the other way round because this name comes from the Bulgarian history, there was a queen named Dessislava, ever since this name is widely spread all over my country.
P.S. 90% of the people do not know how to spell Dessislava in English, 100% of the people have it spelled Desislava in their passports. I am going to change this because I would like to hear my name correctly pronounced.
With best regards,
Dessislava
Replies
:P and a note to Mike C
Çäðàñòè Äåñè!
Actually, Desislava does come from Desislav: Desislav was as common as Desislava back around the 11-12th century, although nowadays the male form is almost extinct.
Mike - I just saw that you have Desislav as "Derived from the Slavic elements desi, possibly meaning "ten", and slav "glory".
The "desi" part is believed to come from the archaic verb "desiti" - to search for. The "deset" (ten) you refer to is not Slavic - it's just a slavinized version of the Latin "decem"
Çäðàñòè Äåñè!
Actually, Desislava does come from Desislav: Desislav was as common as Desislava back around the 11-12th century, although nowadays the male form is almost extinct.
Mike - I just saw that you have Desislav as "Derived from the Slavic elements desi, possibly meaning "ten", and slav "glory".
The "desi" part is believed to come from the archaic verb "desiti" - to search for. The "deset" (ten) you refer to is not Slavic - it's just a slavinized version of the Latin "decem"
"desiti" actually means "to happen"
Thanks Ivayla!