Dora (given name) explained
Dora (el|Δώρα) is a female name of Greek origin, being a shortened form or derived from Dorothea (Dorothy) and Theodora (masculine Theodore),[1] [2] meaning "gift" or in its full form "god's gift", from Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: δῶρον, doron, "gift"[3] + Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: θεός, theos, "god".[4] The name Dora can also be a short form of Isadora (Isidora). Doreen, Dorian, and Dorinda are other examples of names from the same root form.[1]
The earliest form of the word doron is the Mycenaean Greek , dora, meaning "gifts", written in the Linear B syllabic script, but it is not an anthroponym, it is only the plural (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: δῶρα) of said word;[5] on the other hand, the names Theodora and Amphidora are attested in Linear B as , te-o-do-ra, and , a-pi-do-ra, respectively. The masculine counterpart of the latter, i.e. Amphidoros, is also found: , a-pi-do-ro.[6]
In Albanian, dora means "hand". In Russian, Dora can be a diminutive of the male first name Agafodor.[7]
People
- Dora Altmann (1881–1971), German actress
- Dora Annie Dickens (1850–1851), infant daughter of English novelist Charles Dickens
- Dora Anastasiou (born 1988), Cypriot beauty queen
- Dora Bakoyannis (born 1954), Greek politician
- Dora Barrancos (born 1940), Argentine academic and politician
- Dora Beedham née Spong (1879–1969), British nurse and suffragette
- Dora Bryan (1923–2014), British actress
- Dora Carrington (1893–1932), British painter
- Dora Erway (1889–1976), American artist and home economist
- Dora Gabe (1886–1983), Bulgarian Jewish poet
- Dora Greenwell (1821–1882), English poet
- Dora Hand (c. 1844–1878), American dance hall singer in Dodge City, Kansas
- Dora d'Istria (1828–1888), Romanian-Albanian writer
- Dora Herbert Jones (1890–1974), Welsh administrator and singer
- Dora Justiniano de la Rocha (1925–2016), Bolivian linguist, educator and poet
- Dora Kalaus (born 1996), Croatian handball player
- Dora Khayatt (1912–1986), Egyptian-born American painter
- Dora Krsnik (born 1992), Croatian handball player
- Dora Kyriakou (born 1967), Cypriot sprinter
- Dora Lewis (1862–1928), American suffragist
- Dora Maar (1907–1997), French model and photographer
- Dora Richards Miller, (1842–1914), Danish West Indies-born American author and educator
- Dora Mavor Moore (1888–1979), Canadian actress
- Dora Montefiore (1851–1933), English-Australian suffragist, socialist
- Dora Musielak, Mexican-American aerospace engineer, historian of mathematics, and book author
- Dora Pavel (born 1946), Romanian novelist
- Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), Croatian composer
- Dora Puelma (1898-1972), Chilean artist
- Dora Knowlton Ranous (1859–1916), American actress, author
- Dora Ratjen, birth name of Heinrich Ratjen (1918–2008), German high jumper who competed as a woman in the 1936 Olympics, but was later found to be male and/or intersex
- Dora Richter (1892–1966), German transgender woman and the first known person to undergo complete male-to-female gender-affirming surgery
- Dora Rosetti (1908-1989), Greek doctor and writer
- Dora Russell (1894–1986), British author
- Dora Isella Russell (1925-1990) Uruguayan poet, journalist
- Dora Adele Shoemaker (1873-1962), American educator, writer
- Dora Stratou (1903–1988), Greek dancer and folklorist
- Dora Varella (born 2001), Brazilian skateboarder
- Dora V. Wheelock (1847–1923), American activist and writer
Fictional characters
See also
References
Sources
- А. В. Суперанская (A. V. Superanskaya). "Современный словарь личных имён: Сравнение. Происхождение. Написание" (Modern Dictionary of First Names: Comparison. Origins. Spelling). Айрис-пресс. Москва, 2005.
Notes and References
- Web site: Campbell . Mike . Meaning, origin and history of the name Doreen . Behind the Name . 16 November 2019 . 6 February 2023.
- Web site: Campbell . Mike . Meaning, origin and history of the name Dora . Behind the Name . 25 April 2021 . 6 February 2023.
- .
- .
- Web site: The Linear B word do-ra. Palaeolexicon. Word study tool of ancient languages. Web site: Raymoure. K.A.. do-ra-qe. Minoan Linear A & Mycenaean Linear B. Deaditerranean.
- Web site: te-o-do-ra-qe. Web site: Raymoure . K.A.. a-pi-do-ra. Minoan Linear A & Mycenaean Linear B. Deaditerranean.
- Superanskaya, p. 24