Aida (given name)

Aida or Aïda /ɑːˈdə/ is a female given name. Variants include: Aidda, Ada, Aeeda, Aída, Aide, Aidee, Ade, Ajda, Ayeda, Ayeeda, Ayida, Ida, Ieeda, Ieda, Ieta and Iyeeda.[1] The name is derived from the Arabic name "عايدة" "ʻĀyidah" ([ˈʕɑːjida]), or "عائدة" "ʻĀʼidah" ([ˈʕɑːʔida]) in Classical Arabic.

Aida
GenderFemale
Language(s)Arabic, Latin, African
Origin
Meaning“Happy”, "Returning", "Helper", "Distinguished",

Variants

The name was used by Auguste Mariette for his sketch of the plot which Giuseppe Verdi later used for his opera of the same title, Aida. In the Italian opera, Aida is an Ethiopian princess. Mariette claimed that the name was authentically Egyptian, writing in a letter "Don't be alarmed by the title. Aida is an Egyptian name. Normally it would be Aita. But that name would be too harsh, and the singers would irresistibly soften it to Aida."[2] It may be derived from a name recorded on the Rosetta Stone.[2]

Unrelated to this origin, the Italian meaning for Aida is "Happy".[3] "Aida" is also sometimes traced to other African languages. Aida (相田) is also a Japanese surname, meaning to "run across the field".

Notable people named Aida

gollark: Incorrect how? As I see it, those who decide to die and/or not have children will generally reproduce (genetically or memetically) than those who don't.
gollark: That unless you coercively obliterate all humans at once, it won't actually work.
gollark: The most obvious objection is that there's selection pressure against voluntarily extincting yourself.
gollark: Oh, of course you're looking at that.
gollark: I feel like you're just recapitulating the Minoteaur login page.

References

  1. "Aida". Think Baby Names. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  2. Jon Solomon, The Rosetta Stone, Ptolemaic Aetos, and Aida
  3. "All about the name Aida". BabyNames.com. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
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