Re: Tessara
in reply to a message by Cambria
Well, it combines two of my favorite name sounds (Tess & Ara), so I feel like I should love it, but I don't. It looks and sounds very made up to me.
Tessara also reminds me of the tesseract from A Wrinkle in Time. I can almost hear Mrs. Whatsit saying "Speaking of ways, pet, by the way, there is such a thing as a Tessara." I think that makes me like it a little bit.
Tessara also reminds me of the tesseract from A Wrinkle in Time. I can almost hear Mrs. Whatsit saying "Speaking of ways, pet, by the way, there is such a thing as a Tessara." I think that makes me like it a little bit.
Replies
It may very well be.
Made-up, I mean. The owner's surname is very Italian, though, so I'm wondering if it has Italian roots? Or not. :o) Funnily enough, I don't care for Ara, but I find Tessara (in which the Ara sound is very prominent) quite appealing.
Made-up, I mean. The owner's surname is very Italian, though, so I'm wondering if it has Italian roots? Or not. :o) Funnily enough, I don't care for Ara, but I find Tessara (in which the Ara sound is very prominent) quite appealing.
It's not made-up, it's a word
It's Latin in origin. A tessera (plural tesserae) is a glass tile used in a mosaic. I have my period interiors class to thank for that random bit of knowledge. :)
It's Latin in origin. A tessera (plural tesserae) is a glass tile used in a mosaic. I have my period interiors class to thank for that random bit of knowledge. :)
Tessera is a word, but Cambria is talking about Tessara.
I thought it was a combo of Tess and Sara. It does look made up. I googled, and it is, in fact, a word. Apparently a math one refering to quadrilaterals. A tessaraglot is someone who speaks four languages, or something. I want to prn it TES-er-ah, though.