Perdita (given name)

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Perdita
Florizel and Perdita from William Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale by Mary F Raphael, ca. 1901.
GenderFeminine
Language(s)Latin
Origin
Meaninglost

Perdita is a feminine given name derived from perditus, meaning lost. It was used by William Shakespeare for an abandoned princess, the heroine of his 1610 play The Winter's Tale, and for a canine heroine of Dodie Smith's 1956 book The Hundred and One Dalmatians and the Walt Disney Pictures 1961 film adaptation of the book, One Hundred and One Dalmatians.[1]

Women[edit]

Fiction[edit]

  • Perdita (The Winter's Tale), the heroine of Shakespeare's play The Winter's Tale
  • Perdita Boyte, a character from the 1936 novel And Berry Came Too by Dornford Yates
  • Perdita Halley Reisden, a character in Sarah Smith's historical mystery seriesThe Vanished Child, The Knowledge of Water, Citizen of the Country and Crimes and Survivors
  • Perdita Hyde-Sinclair, a character from the British soap opera Emmerdale
  • Perdita Nitt, aka Agnes Nitt, a character in the Witches subset of Terry Pratchett's Discworld series
  • Perdita Willoughby-Lloyd, a minor character from the TV series The Haunting of Bly Manor
  • Queen Perdita of Vlatava, a character of the animated superhero series Young Justice
  • Perdita, a female Dalmatian dog in The Hundred and One Dalmatians, a 1956 children's novel by Dodie Smith, and the media franchise based on the novel; see 101 Dalmatians (disambiguation)
  • The Free Ship Perdita, a sky-sailing ship in the 1999 novel Stardust (1999) by Neil Gaiman

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hanks, Patrick; Hardcastle, Kate; Hodges, Flavia (2006). Oxford Dictionary of First Names. Oxford University Press. p. 60. ISBN 0-19-861060-2.