Phyllis

Etymology
From.

Proper noun

 * 1)  A girl who killed herself for love, and was turned into an almond tree.
 * 2)  Phyllis (river god) Phyllis (Φύλλις) was the god of the homonymous river in Bithynia.
 * 3)  The title character of the tale of ( Phyllis and Aristotle ) in medieval legend
 * 4)  Phyllis, mother of the Trojan Alcaeus
 * 5)  Phyllis, consort of Ereuthalion
 * 6)  derived from the mythological character.
 * 7) * 1599 John Farmer, Fair Phyllis (a madrigal):
 * Fair Phyllis I saw sitting all alone / Feeding her flock near to the mountain side
 * 1) * 1855 A.W., The Little Foot-Page, in Chambers's Journal, No. 92, Oct. 6, 1855:
 * But the name to which the Pages were given of yore, / And the name of the Page I am speaking of, bore / As much likeness as Sukey to Eleonore, / or Betty to Phyllis or Lalage;

Usage notes

 * The given name was mostly limited to pastoral poetry until it became popular in the Anglo-Saxon world during the first half of the 20th century.

Translations

 * German:
 * Italian: Fillide


 * Italian: Fillide
 * Turkish: