New name--(Gaelen (f) ) can anyone help me?
Hey all..
i have a challange.. what does gaelen (women) come from/mean? itwould be much appreciated if you could email me if anyone knows..
i have a challange.. what does gaelen (women) come from/mean? itwould be much appreciated if you could email me if anyone knows..
Replies
I like this site to check out names:
http://www.kabalarians.com/
http://www.kabalarians.com/
Nooooo!! These people would add and analyze "Kornholio" if someone submitted it! Even Nanaea posted her name there (to her recurring shame!).
These people are bogus, JEnnell! If they weren't Canadian and therefore harmless, I'd be very wary!
These people are bogus, JEnnell! If they weren't Canadian and therefore harmless, I'd be very wary!
Galen, however spelt, is a GUY'S name. Don't believe I've ever heard it used for a girl.
The name with the above spelling is on this web site listing. I believe it means "calm" in its original form. Bearers include the Roman physician and Galen Cisco, the Mets pitcher from back when.
The name with the above spelling is on this web site listing. I believe it means "calm" in its original form. Bearers include the Roman physician and Galen Cisco, the Mets pitcher from back when.
"Galen, however spelt, is a GUY'S name"
I beg to disagree with you on this one, Hid Diva. Galen is derived from the feminine-gender word "galene", meaning "tranquility" in Greek. All Galenes in my neck of the woods are girlies. Same goes for my slavic neighbours, where the name appears in several variations including Galina and Galya. The silly Romans decided to masculate the name into Galenius, and the rest is history.
I beg to disagree with you on this one, Hid Diva. Galen is derived from the feminine-gender word "galene", meaning "tranquility" in Greek. All Galenes in my neck of the woods are girlies. Same goes for my slavic neighbours, where the name appears in several variations including Galina and Galya. The silly Romans decided to masculate the name into Galenius, and the rest is history.
Ah, but Galene (or Galena) is as distinctive from Galen/Gaelen as Denise is from Dennis or Edwina from Edwin. Of course one can come up with feminized versions of male names, but they are best distinguished by BOTH spelling and pronunciation. "Gaelen" doesn't make the cut in that regard.
Correction
Oops! A male version of the name *did* exist in classical Greece, Galenos (accented in the last syllable). Although I am lot aware of Galenos being presently used as a first name, I have seen it used as a surname.
Oops! A male version of the name *did* exist in classical Greece, Galenos (accented in the last syllable). Although I am lot aware of Galenos being presently used as a first name, I have seen it used as a surname.