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Dido
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==Name== [[File:Dosso Dossi 041.jpg|thumb|Dido, a painting by [[Dosso Dossi]].]] Many names in the legend of Dido are of [[Punic language|Punic]] origin, which suggests that the first Greek authors who mention this story have taken up Phoenician accounts. One suggestion is that ''Dido'' is an epithet from the same [[Semitic root]] as ''[[David]]'', which means "Beloved".<ref>Barton, ''Semitic and Hamitic Origins'' (1934) at 305.</ref> Others state Did么 means "the wanderer".<ref name="auto">{{Harvnb|No毛l|2014|p=5}}</ref><ref>[[Mar铆a Eugenia Aubet]], ''Tiro and the Phoenician colonies of the West'', 2nd edition, Bellaterra, 1994, p. 217</ref> According to Marie-Pierre No毛l, "Elishat/Elisha" is a name repeatedly attested on [[Punic language|Punic]] votives. It is composed of * the Punic reflex of [[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic/示il-|*示il-]] "god", which can mean the remote Phoenician creator god [[El (deity)|El]], or it can be [[names of God in Judaism#El|a name for God in Judaism]], and * "鈥恑ssa", which could be either "[[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Semitic/示i拧-|示i拧]]" ([[wikt:饜饜|饜饜]]), meaning "fire", or another word for "woman".<ref>{{Harvnb|No毛l|2014|p=3}}</ref> Other works state that it is the feminine form of El.<ref>Smith, ''Carthage and the Carthaginians'' (1878, 1902) at 13.</ref> In Greek it appears as ''Theioss么'', which translates 脡lissa: ''el'' becoming ''theos''.<ref name="auto"/>
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