| Hi,
I've some information about your request.
Andrea derives from Greek "aner" and the root "andr" which are meaning
"man". Indeed, this is a typical male name. This name is used in many
languages: Andrea (Italy), Andre'(France), Andrew (England), Andreas
(Germany), Andres (Spain). In Italy is one of the most common names.
The onomastic (name day) is on November 30th.
St.Andrea, Jesus Christ apostle and St.Peter's brother, was
martyrized over an X shaped cross. From this episode, derives the
word "St.Andrea cross".
I hope this is what you were asking for.
CIAO !!
GIANNI (DEC-ACT TURIN-ITALY)
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| Gianni's right -- and so are you! In Italy, Andrea is the
equivalent of Andrew -- i.e., it's definitely the male form.
It's kind of a strange bird, however, in that it ends in an
"a," which is typically the feminine ending ("o" is the
masculine).
In English-speaking countries, however, there is a feminine
form of Andrew that is spelled Andrea (in fact, I think it
might be the most popular). Some other versions are Andria,
Andree (French), Andrine (French again?), etc. Not sure
exactly where Andrea comes from though.
If you do decide on Andrea, just hope she doesn't marry an
Italian and move to Italy.
-- Cliff
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