Amadore
in reply to a message by Cleveland Kent Evans
Amadore is an Italian variant of Amatore, nowadays used as surname; other Italian variants are Amadori and Amatori (http://www.melegnano.net/cognomi/cognomi0001m.htm).
The endings in -ore are not Spanish, but Italian, because in Spanish (and other Latin languages), the names are usually derivated from nominative form (amator>amador; salvator>salvador, e.g.); in Italian, they are usually derivated from genitive form (amatoris>amatori>amatore[>amadore], salvatoris>salvatori>salvatore[>salvadore], e.g.).
Amador (usual in Spanish, nowadays even, and parallel to Italian Amatore) comes directly from the Latin first name Amator/Amatrix testified as cognomen in Imperial Roman Age (I. Kajanto, The Latin Cognomina, Roma 1982) (derivated from amator, -oris, "one who loves, lover"), and used among Christians from Rome because of its symbolic sense ("one who loves God").
Lumia
http://onomastica.mailcatala.com
The endings in -ore are not Spanish, but Italian, because in Spanish (and other Latin languages), the names are usually derivated from nominative form (amator>amador; salvator>salvador, e.g.); in Italian, they are usually derivated from genitive form (amatoris>amatori>amatore[>amadore], salvatoris>salvatori>salvatore[>salvadore], e.g.).
Amador (usual in Spanish, nowadays even, and parallel to Italian Amatore) comes directly from the Latin first name Amator/Amatrix testified as cognomen in Imperial Roman Age (I. Kajanto, The Latin Cognomina, Roma 1982) (derivated from amator, -oris, "one who loves, lover"), and used among Christians from Rome because of its symbolic sense ("one who loves God").
Lumia
http://onomastica.mailcatala.com
Replies
I think that your name has a sound to it that makes me renenber beter than other names i've heard