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Happy Birthday Julie

Happy Birthday Julie Card for celebrating
Happy Birthday Julie Personalized Card for celebrating
Happy Birthday Julie Card Images

Happy Birthday Julie Personalized Card

Happy birthday to you Julie! I wish you a very special day, sending this Happy Birthday Julie personalized card to you. Dear Julie, I wish a bright and beautiful day to you on your special day. This named card was specially designed for Julie’s birthday.

Julie Given Name Meaning & History

GENDER: Feminine; USAGE: French, Danish, Norwegian, Czech, English, German, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese. PRONOUNCED: ZHUY-LEE (French), YOO-lee-e (Danish), YOO-li-ye (Czech), JOO-lee (English), YOO-lyə (German). Origin French: Youthful; Jove”s child; a feminine form of Julian. The French, Danish, Norwegian and Czech form of JULIA. It has spread to many other regions as well. It has been common in the English-speaking world since the early 20th century. — The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: A supreme god from the Latin and Proto Indo-European Jupiter. Jupiter is the King of the Gods and the God of sky and thunder in Roman Religion. From the Late Latin “Iulius”, meaning “youth, youthful, juvenile”. From the Ancient Greek ioulos, meaning “haired, bearded, downy-bearded”.

The Roman and the standard meaning is “sacred to Jupiter”. The Gens Julia or Iulia was one of the most ancient Patrician families in ancient Rome. Members of the Gens attained the highest dignities of the state in the earliest times of the republic. Iulius is the fifth month of the Roman calendar. The month was renamed in honor of Gaius Julius Caesar after his death and deification, as he was born in this month. In republican Rome, the month was formally known as Quintilis, “fifth”. July is the seventh month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian Calendars. — Julia originates in Latin language and means “soft-haired”. It is a feminine form of Julius. Julia was the name of a character in the Bible, as well as the name of several martyrs and saints, including Julia of Corsica and Julia of Merida. It is also the character in Shakespeare’s play The Gentlemen of Verona. In the English-speaking countries, it has been regularly used since the 18th century and has always been one of the most popular feminine given names in the United States.

See also  Happy Birthday Nathaniel