Leon (given name)

Leon is a first name of Greek origin-the Greek λέων (léon; leōn), meaning "lion," has spawned the Latin "Leo," French "Lyon," Irish "Leon" and Spanish "León." Perhaps the oldest attested historical figure to bear this name was Leon of Sparta, a 5th-century BCE king of Sparta, while in Greek mythology Leon was a Giant killed by Heracles. During the Christian era Leon was merged with the Latin cognate Leo, with the result that the two forms are used interchangeably.[1] A similar Greek name to Leon is Leonidas, meaning "son of a lion", with Leonidas I, king of Sparta, being perhaps the most famous bearer of that name.

Leon (English, German, Dutch, Russian version) or Léon (French version) or León (Spanish version) may refer to:

Etymology

Ancient Greek λέων from Proto-Semitic *labiʾ- (not Indo-European).

People

gollark: I can spread a patch which allows my code to work as a virus, obviously?
gollark: I mean, I really only need to change the implementations, or specifically the specific implementation which happens to run on my laptop.
gollark: Well, I intend for it to work differently, so obviously glibc or something is wrong. Maybe I can muck with the program counter somehow.
gollark: * syscalls and whatever
gollark: So I should work out some way to live-patch the kernel to increase the amount of signal-safe functions?

See also

References

  1. Withycombe, E.G. (1945) The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names, 3rd edition, Oxford University Press
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.