- 3
- people in the U.S. have this name Get contact details for people named Pamela Zaucha
Meaning & Origins
Invented by the Elizabethan pastoral poet Sir Philip Sidney (1554–86), in whose verse it is stressed on the second syllable. There is no clue to the sources that influenced Sidney in this coinage. It was later taken up by Samuel Richardson for the name of the heroine of his novel Pamela (1740). In Henry Fielding's Joseph Andrews (1742), which started out as a parody of Pamela, Fielding comments that the name is ‘very strange’.
| 66th in the U.S. for 2011 |
Polish: descriptive nickname from Polish za uchem ‘behind the ear’, denoting someone who had something behind one of his ears.
| 45,614th in the U.S. for 2011 |
Nicknames & variations
Pamella, Pamelia, Pamel, Pamelaa, Pamell, Pameal, Pamellia, Pameli, Pamele, Pamelea
Zack, Zauche, Zouck, Zoucha, Zaske, Zaccheo, Zacks, Zhuk, Zauke, Ziuko
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