Calista/Callista Spelling
I like the name Callista, and have been comparing the two spellings (one L versus two Ls). According to BtN, Calista is the dominant spelling with Callista as an alternate. I wonder if this is based on the popularity, as the one L spelling was in the Top 1000 for a few years and the two L spelling never was.However, the name seems to be derived from either Callistus or Kallisto, both of which have two Ls.So the question is- why would one-L Calista be the dominant/preferred spelling if both of the names it could be derived from have two Ls?I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on the two spellings. Thanks!
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Because the name was popularized by the actress Calista Flockhart. The spelling of her name is therefore the most well-known.
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Thank you, this makes sense.
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The single L spelling is at least late-Latin / medieval in origin, if not older - note the masculine Calixtus / Calistus. The original Greek feminine name is Callisto, Callista is a Latin feminine derivative a masculine (probably family) name, derived from the Greek superlative κάλλιστος kállistos (most good/beautiful/noble). The root is κᾱλός (kālós), the substantive derivative form κᾰ́λλος (kállos) is probably a back-formation from the superlative. The reduction of the geminated (twinned) lambda to a single letter is possibly due to a re-analysis of related names as compounds of κᾱλός (kālós) "beautiful/good" rather than dithematic names in which two independent meanings are paired, e.g. Κᾰλλῐκλῆς (Kalliklês) "beauty/nobility + fame"; however the reduction of Callistus/Callista and Callisto to Calistus/Calista and Calisto can also be blamed on a limited understanding of classical Greek grammar by the Latin-speakers using these names — there is an apparent understanding that these names are derived from Greek Kalos, without an understanding that the lambda/l would be geminated (the gemination may not be have been any more apparent in spoken Latin than it is in English).

This message was edited 1/24/2020, 5:29 PM

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We see the same one-L/two-L inconsistency in words like calisthenics & calligraphy.
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QuoteSo the question is- why would one-L Calista be the dominant/preferred spelling if both of the names it could be derived from have two Ls?

Most likely, it was introduced to American society through a celebrity or prominent fictional character. Names that are adopted simply as namesakes are rarely checked for historical precedence.

This message was edited 1/20/2020, 7:38 PM

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Thank you, this makes sense. I guess popular culture does not care about the etymology as much as some of us might ;)
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