Priscilla

Priscilla is an English female given name adopted from Latin Prisca, derived from priscus. One suggestion is that it is intended to bestow long life on the bearer.

Prisca, Priscilla
GenderFemale
Origin
Word/nameRoman
Meaningvenerable, ancient, classical, primordial[1]

The name first appears in the New Testament of Christianity variously as Priscilla and Prisca, a female leader in early Christianity.[2][3]

The name also appears along with Maximilla, as female leaders in the Montanist controversy of the 2nd century AD.

The name appears in English literature in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene (1596) and was adopted as an English name by the Puritans in the 17th century.

Priscilla may refer to:

People

Fictional characters

Prisca

Other

gollark: And other osmarks.net subsystems run separately and also drag in horrible quantities of dependencies sometimes.
gollark: And the build script has something like 100 dependencies (transitive).
gollark: It also ships its own JS (separate from the main, custom frontend JS, of course) which probably has dependencies in it too.
gollark: And the comment system is its own separate Python server.
gollark: However, various subprojects pull in something like five different web frameworks.

See also

References

  1. Harper, Douglas (November 2001). "Priscilla". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2006-08-10.
  2. Alexander, Joseph Addison (1857). The Acts of the Apostles explained, volume II. London: Nisbet.
  3. Lee, Frank Theodosius (1913). The New Testament Period and Its Leaders. Sherman, French & Company. p. 323. A large share of this work evidently fell to Priscilla. That she possessed abilities of a high order would seem to be inferred from the fact that her name is always mentioned along with her husband's — in a number of instances is mentioned first.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.