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Re: Sevasti (f) - any info?
Hi Lassia!I've never heard that name either, but I think your guess (it might be related to Sebastian) seems to be a good one.In Sweden there are currently just 15 women with that name and noone at all in Norway and Denmark, so it seems to come from another part of the world.A Russian form of Sebastian is Sevastian, and they are usually a bit closer to the Greek pronunciation... Maybe the Greek experts here can help? Pavlos??Terveisin
Satu
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Hello Lassia,My name is Sevasti, I am of greek origin living in Australia. This name is very common in the southern Greek islands namely called the Dodecanese. My parents came from a small island named Kalymnos where there are many with the same name as myself, although unusual elsewhere and sometimes it is hard for someone who has never heard of it to say, it is a lovely name. In Greek we have a word called ' Sevas ' in English it means 'respect'. I don't know if the name comes from that word.... hope it helps... Sincerely Sevasti.
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Hi my name is Sevasti and I live in Australia too. I am from Mutilini
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Thanks; my guess now is that the name Sevasti came to Finland and Scandinavia from Russia. Maybe there's an Orthodox saint by the name Sevasti? After all, the two established religions in Finland are the Lutheran Church AND the Orthodox Church, and the Orthodox have their own name-day calendar which consists of (mostly Russian and Greek) saints' names. Sevasti is not included, however; could it be a minor saint or another prominent religious figure?
Lass
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Indeed, Sevasti is an extremely rare name derived (as with Sebastian) from the Greek "sebas" meaning veneration.
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Do you happen to know whether there is a Saint associated with the name, and if so when the name day is celebrated?
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Thanks!
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30000th post!Way to go Lassia!
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