Name: Roméo

Gender: Male

Usage: Roméo is not a popular first name. It is more often used as a boy (male) name.

People having the name Roméo are in general originating from Belgium, France.

Variants: For another variant of the name Roméo across the world, see Romeo.

We apologize, but we don't have a meaning for this name. Please feel free to read what others say about this name and to share your comments if you have more information.

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Numerology of the first name Roméo: calculate the core numbers of your numerology chart to discover your numerological profile and your personality traits.

The Growth number corresponding to this first name is 7. It denotes a pattern that assists you in growth and development: spiritual, intelligent, analytical, reserved, knowledgeable, mysterious, intuitive.

Interpretation:
Qualities: Philosophical, Spiritual
Ruling planet: Neptune
Colors: Green
Gemstones: Moonstone

Learn more with our free Numerology Tool

The name Roméo is ranked on the 120,417th position of the most used names. It means that this name is rarely used.

We estimate that there are at least 300 persons in the world having this name which is around 0.001% of the population. The name Roméo has five characters. It means that it is relatively medium-length, compared to the other names in our database.

The graph below represents the number of people who were given the name Roméo for each year since 1900 in the U.S.A.:

The name day of Roméo is 25 February.

For other names check our Name Day Calendar

Romeo is an Italian masculine given name. It is also a surname and a place name.

In old French, we said Roumeux or Romeux but the word did not become a first name.


Italian: from the medieval religious name Romeo ‘pilgrim to Rome’ (Late Latin Rōmaeus, a derivative of Rōma cf. Romolo). For his romantic tragedy, Shakespeare derived the name of the hero, the lover of Juliet, from a poem by Arthur Brooke, The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet. This is ultimately derived from a story by the Italian writer Matteo Bandello (1485–1561), whose works are the source of the plots of several Elizabethan and Jacobean plays.

The section "History and Origin" of this page contains content from the copyrighted Wikipedia article "Roméo"; that content is used under the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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