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The Original Cheryl may have been a guy :)
Welcome to our laboratory and playground Cheryl :) Lemme propose an alternative to Nanaea 's very elegant approach.
Assuming that "Cheryl " is derived from the fruit Cherry , one can trace Cheryl to the Greek "kerasos" (cherry) => "cerasus" (Latin) => cerise, cherry, kirsche etc (contemporary languages).... As a matter of fact there is a very early recorded Mycenaean *male* name "Keraso" (George Babiniotis, *Hellenic Lexicon*).
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False alarm...must have been a gal!Looked into it a bit more: the Mycenaean Keraso is accented in the last syllable (Êåñáóþ), a characteristic of feminine names.
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Cool Greek etymology, nevertheless, Pav!Btw, Cheryl , Pavlos is a name you'll see a lot around here, as well. In addition to being one of our board's "OnomaMasters" (a title created by Board Administrator Mike C.), Pavlos is also our Master Anagrammatist and Resident Greek. :)-- Nanaea
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A "man-at-arms magistrate" and "inserted Greek"?
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