Nerina

"Variant of Nerida. Sea nymph"

♀ Féminin · Greek
mythological oceanic Australian variant

📖 À propos Nerina

Nerina est une forme italienne de Néréide, les cinquante nymphes marines filles du dieu grec Nérée ; le prénom a été immortalisé dans la poésie romantique italienne par Giacomo Leopardi, qui s’adresse à un amour perdu nommé Nerina dans sa lyrique Le Ricordanze (1829), en faisant un prénom de tendre souvenir et de mythologie océanique.

📍 Détails

  • OrigineGreek
  • Genre♀ Féminin
  • SignificationVariant of Nerida. Sea nymph

🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés

⭐ Personnes Célèbres

  • Thetis (the most celebrated Nereid) — Sea goddess and Nereid of Greek mythology, the silver-footed daughter of Nereus; mother of the hero Achilles, whom she dipped in the river Styx to make him invulnerable (leaving only his heel unprotected); her grief for her mortal son and her intervention among the gods in the Iliad give her one of the most emotionally complex roles in Greek epic tradition.
  • Nerina (in Leopardi's poetry) — Figure addressed in Giacomo Leopardi's lyric poem Le Ricordanze (1829), one of the masterpieces of Italian Romantic verse; Nerina represents the poet's lost youth and vanished love in Recanati, and Leopardi's tender lines — 'O Nerina! E di te forse non odo / questi luoghi parlar?' — gave the name a permanent resonance in Italian literary culture as a name of memory, loss, and recovered beauty.
  • Nerina Pallot — British singer-songwriter (born 1975, raised in Jersey, Channel Islands), known for her debut album Dear Frustrated Superstar (2001) and the platinum-selling Fires (2007), which contained the hit single 'Everybody's Gone to War'; her melodic, emotionally resonant songwriting has earned her a devoted international following and critical respect.
  • Amphitrite (queen of the Nereids) — Nereid and sea goddess of Greek mythology, daughter of Nereus; she became the consort of Poseidon (Neptune) and queen of the seas; her image — often shown crowned and riding sea creatures — appeared on ancient Greek pottery, mosaics, and sculpture, and her name was given to a genus of polychaete worms and an asteroid (29 Amphitrite).