Sofia vs Sophia - What's the difference?
sofia | sophia |
, borne by an early Christian saint, and by European royalty.
* 1766 Oliver Goldsmith: The Vicar of Wakefield :
* 1998 (Anne Tyler), A Patchwork Planet , A.A.Knopf Inc., page 2:
(gnosticism) An (a form of divine being) in the Gnostic tradition.
Sophia is a alternative form of sofia.
Sophia is a related term of sofia.
As proper nouns the difference between sofia and sophia
is that sofia is the capital city of Bulgaria while Sophia is {{given name|female|from=Ancient Greek}}, borne by an early Christian saint, and by European royalty.sofia
English
(wikipedia Sofia)Etymology 1
(etyl) , named after the .Derived terms
* SofianEtymology 2
A less common spelling, borrowed from continental Europe, of the given name Sophia.sophia
English
(wikipedia Sophia)Alternative forms
* SofiaProper noun
(en proper noun)- I intended to call her after Aunt Grizel, but my wife who, during pregnancy, had been reading romances, insisted upon her being called Olivia. In less than another year we had another daughter, and now I was determined that Grizel should be her name; but a rich relation taking a fancy to stand godmother, the girl was, by her directions, called Sophia , so that we had two romantic names in the family, but I solemnly protest I had no hand in it.
- Gram said, "Sophia'. Would that be an Italian name?" "It came from a great-aunt," '''Sophia''' told her, turning briefly in her direction. "Was your great-aunt Italian?" "No, Scottish." "Oh." I knew what Gram was aiming at here. She wanted to find out whether '''Sophia''' was Catholic. She poked her headful of pink curlers forward for a moment and looked at me. "Presbyterian, " I told her. "Oh." She sat back again, Oh, well, you could see her thinking, her own daughter had married Episcopal and the sky hadn't fallen in. "It's a pretty name, anyhow," she told ' Sophia . "Thank you." "I like names that end with an a, don't you? - - -
