The Original Cheryl may have been a guy :)
in reply to a message by cheryl
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*).
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*).
Replies
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.
Looked into it a bit more: the Mycenaean Keraso is accented in the last syllable (Êåñáóþ), a characteristic of feminine names.
A "man-at-arms magistrate" and "inserted Greek"?