Vera&john Casino
Pronunciation | /ˈvɪərə,ˈvɛrə/ |
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Origin | |
Word/name | Slavic |
Meaning | 'Truth' or 'Faith' Albanian: 'Summer' |
Region of origin | Europe |
Other names | |
Nickname(s) | Věrka, Věrča, Věruška |
Related names | Veronica, Verena, Olivera, Severa |
Popularity | see popular names |
Vera (Cyrillic: Ве́раVéra, “faith”) is a female first name of Slavic origin, and by folk etymology it has also been explained as Latin vera meaning true. In Slavic languages, Vera means faith.[1] The name Vera has been used in the English speaking world since the 19th century and was popular in the early 20th century.[2]
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Gender: Feminine[3]
Usage: English, German, Italian, Spanish, Scandinavian, Slovak, Czech, Greek, Dutch, Slovene, Bulgarian, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, Portuguese, Spanish, Russian,[3] Albanian, French, Polish, Armenian, Hungarian, Romanian.
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Other scripts: Вера (Russian, Bulgarian, Serbian, Macedonian), Βέρα (Greek)
Diminutives: Veer, Veerke, Veertje (Dutch), Verica (Serbian and Croatian), Verka or Vierka (Slovakian), Verochka, Verusha (Russian).
Other languages: Verel (French), Věra (Czech), Veera (Finnish), Veer, Veerle (Dutch), Wiera (Polish), Vira (Ukrainian), Viera (Slovak)
Origin[edit]
In the Ancient Greek and Christian faith, Saint Fides (Faith or Vera), her sisters Spes (Hope) and Caritas (Love) and their mother Sophia (Wisdom), died as martyrs in the second century AD during the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire under the emperor Hadrian[citation needed]. The names are also the words designating the three key Christian virtues mentioned in Apostle Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians (1 Corinthians 13:13).
In the English language, late 13c., verray 'true, real, genuine,' later 'actual, sheer' (late 14c.), from Anglo-French verrai, Old French verai 'true, truthful, sincere; right, just, legal,' from Vulgar Latin *veracus, from Latin verax (genitive veracis) 'truthful,' from verus 'true' (source also of Italian vero), from PIE root *were-o- 'true, trustworthy.' Meaning 'greatly, extremely' is first recorded mid-15c. Used as a pure intensive since Middle English.[4]
In Albanian the meaning of the word 'vera' is summer. The Albanian male version of the name Vera is Veriu which has the meaning 'north' alb. (veri, veriu).
A[edit]
- Vera Albreht (1895–1971), Slovene poet, writer, publicist and translator
- Vera Alentova (born 1942), Soviet actress
- Vera Altayskaya (1919–1978), Soviet actress
- Vera Eugenia Andrus (1895–1979), American artist and printmaker
- Vera Anisimova (born 1952), Soviet athlete
- Vera Anstey (1889–1976), British economist
- Vera Atkins (1908–2000), Romanian-born British intelligence officer during World War II
B[edit]
- Vera Baboun (born 1956), Palestinian politician
- Vera Baeva (born 1930), Bulgarian writer and composer
- Vera Baird (born 1950), British Labour Party activist, barrister, author and lecturer
- Vera Baklanova (born 1947), Soviet Olympic diver
- Věra Barandovská-Frank (born 1952), Czech Esperantist and philologist
- Vera Baranovskaya (1885–1935), Russian actress
- Vera Barbosa (born 1989), Portuguese track and field athlete
- Vera Barclay (1893–1989), British novelist and leading female pioneer Scouter
- Vera Bazarova (born 1993), Russian pair skater
- Vera Begić (born 1982), Croatian athlete
- Véra Belmont (born 1938), French film producer, director and screenwriter
- Vera Berdich (1915–2003), American printmaker
- Vera Bergkamp (born 1971), Dutch politician
- Věra Bílá (born 1954), Romani musician and singer of Romani folk and pop songs
- Vera Bjelik (1921–1944), Soviet World War II aircraft navigator
- Vera Blagojević (1920-1942), Yugoslav political activist
- Vera von Blumenthal, American potter and educator
- Vera Bogetti (born 1908), British stage and film actress
- Vera Borea, French fashion designer
- Vera de Bosset (1888–1982), Russian-born American dancer and artist
- Vera Bradford (1904–2004), Australian classical pianist and teacher
- Vera Brezhneva (born 1982), Ukrainian pop-singer and television presenter
- Vera Brittain (1893–1970), English writer
- Vera Broido (1907–2004), Russian-born British writer
- Vera Brosgol (born 1984), Russian-born American cartoonist and animator
- Vera Scantlebury Brown (1889–1946), Australian medical practitioner and pediatrician
- Vera Brühne (1910–2001), German victim of miscarriage of justice
- Vera Bryndzei (born 1952), Ukrainian speed skater
- Vera Buchanan (1902–1955), American Democratic politician
- Vera C. Bushfield (1889–1976), American politician
C[edit]
- Vera Alexandrovna Tiscenko Calder (1902–1983), Russian actress
- Vera Carmi (1914–1969), Italian film actress
- Vera Carrara (born 1980), Italian professional racing cyclist
- Vera Cáslavská (born 1942), Czech gymnast
- Vera Caspary (1899–1987), American writer
- Vera Celis (born 1959), Belgian politician
- Věra Černá (born 1963), Czech artistic gymnast
- Vera Chapman (1898–1996), English author and founder of the first Tolkien Society
- Vera Chino (born 1943), Native American potter
- Vera Chirwa (born 1932), Malawian-born lawyer and human and civil rights activist
- Vera Chytilová (born 1929), Czech film director
- Véra Clouzot (1913–1960), Brazilian-born French film actress and screenwriter
- Vera Coking, American eminent domain litigant
- Grand Duchess Vera Constantinovna of Russia (1854–1912), daughter of Grand Duke Konstantine Nicholaievich of Russia
- Princess Vera Constantinovna of Russia (1906–2001), youngest child of Grand Duke Konstantine Konstantinovich of Russia
- Vera Cordeiro (born 1950), Brazilian social entrepreneur and physician
- Vera Cornish, British stage and film actress
D[edit]
- Vera Dajht-Kralj (born 1928), Croatian Jewish sculptor
- Vera Day (born 1935), British film and television actress
- Vera Micheles Dean (1903–1972), Russian-American political scientist
- Vera Djatel (born 1984), Ukrainian footballer
- Vera Dua (born 1952), Belgian politician
- Vera Duarte, Cape Verdean human rights activist and politician
- Vera Ducas (1912–1948), Czechoslovak Jewish woman murdered in Israel reportedly for spying
- Vera Dulova (1909–2000), Russian harpist
- Vera Ðurašković (born 1949), Yugoslav basketball player
- Vera Dushevina (born 1986), Russian tennis player
- Vera Duss (1910 — 2005), American-born French medical doctor and Roman Catholic nun
E[edit]
- Vera Elkan (1908–2008), South African photographer
F[edit]
- Vera Farmiga (born 1973), American actress of Ukrainian origin
- Vera King Farris (1938–2009), American zoologist and academic
- Vera Figner (1852–1942), Russian revolutionary
- Vera Filatova (born 1982), Ukrainian-born British actress
- Vera Fischer (actress) (born 1951), Brazilian actress
- Vera Fischer (sculptor) (1925–2009), Croatian sculptor
- Vera Flasarová (born 1952), Czech politician
- Vera Fogwill (born 1972), Argentine film and television actress, film director, and screenplay writer
- Vera Frances (born 1930), British actress
- Vera Francis, Native American writer and activist
- Vera Freeman (1865–1896), American stage actress
- Vera Friedländer (1928 - 2019), German writer and Holocaust survivor
G[edit]
- Vera Mae Green (1928 - 1982), African American anthropologist, scholar, educator, author
- Vera Galushka-Duyunova (1945–2012), Russian volleyball player
- Vera Gebuhr (born 1916), Danish film actress
- Vera Gedroitz (1870–1932), Lithuanian princess, doctor of medicine and writer
- Vera Georgiyevna Orlova (1894—1977), Russian actress
- Vera Gornostayeva (born 1929), Russian pianist
- Vera Grabe (born 1951), Colombian anthropologist and politician
- Vera Griner (1890–1992), Russian music teacher
H[edit]
- Vera Hall (1902–1964), American folk singer
- Vera Harsányi (born 1919, date of death unknown), Hungarian freestyle swimmer
- Vera Henriksen (born 1927), Norwegian writer
- Vera Hilger (born 1971), German painter
- Vera Holland (1949–1996), English woman who was murdered
- Vera Louise Holmøy (born 1931), Norwegian judge
- Vera Holtz (born 1953), Brazilian television and cinema actress
- Vera Homp (born 1991), German footballer
I[edit]
- Vera Ilyina (born 1974), Russian diver
- Vera Inber (1890–1972), Russian-Soviet poet and writer
- Vera Int-Veen (born 1967), German journalist and television presenter
- Vera Isaku (born 1955), Albanian journalist
J[edit]
- Vera James (1892–19??), New Zealand-born theatre and film actor
- Věra Janoušková (1922–2010), Czech sculptor, painter and graphic artist
- Vera Jeftimijades (born 1937), Yugoslav fencer
- Vera Jocić (1923–1944), Yugoslav partisan
- Vera Johnson (1920–2007), Canadian folk singer
- Vera Jordanova (born 1975), Bulgarian-Finnish model and actress
K[edit]
- Vera Kamsha (born 1962), Russian author of high fantasy and journalist
- Vera Karalli (1889–1972), Russian ballet dancer, choreographer and silent film actress
- Vera Karmishina-Ganeeva (born 1988), Russian athlete
- Vera Katz (1933–2017), American Democratic politician
- Vera Kharuzhaya (1903–1942), Belarusian Communist writer and activist
- Vera Kholodnaya (1893–1919), Russian silent film actress
- Vera Kingston (1917–1996), English swimmer
- Vera Klement (born 1929), Polish-born American artist
- Věra Klimková (born 1957), Czechoslovak cross country skier
- Vera Kobalia (born 1981), Georgian politician
- Vera Koedooder (born 1983), Dutch professional racing cyclist
- Věra Kohnová (1929–1942), Czech Jewish diarist and concentration camp victim
- Vera Kolodzig (born 1985), German-Portuguese actress
- Vera Komarkova (1942–2005), Czech-born American mountaineer and botanist
- Vera Komisova (born 1953), Russian hurdler
- Vera Komissarzhevskaya (1864–1910), Russian actress
- Véra Korène (1901–1996), Russian-born French actress and singer
- Vera Koval (born 1983), Russian judoka
- Vera Krasnova (born 1950), Russian speed skater
- Vera Krasova (born 1987), Russian model and beauty queen
- Vera Krepkina (born 1933), Russian athlete
- Vera Kublanovskaya (1920–2012), Russian mathematician
- Věra Kůrková (born 1948), Czech computer scientist
L[edit]
- Vera Lantratova (born 1947), Russian volleyball player
- Vera Leigh (1903–1944), British spy during World War II
- Vera Lengsfeld (born 1952), German politician
- Vera Leth (born 1958), Greenlandic Ombudsman
- Vera Lewis (1873–1956), American film and stage actress
- Vera Lindsay (1911–1992), British Shakespearean actress
- Vera Lischka (born 1977), Austrian breaststroke swimmer
- Vera G. List (1908–2002), American art collector and philanthropist
- Vera Liubatovich (1855–1907), Russian revolutionary
- Vera Bate Lombardi (1885–1948), English-born socialite
- Vera Lutter (born 1960), German-born American artist
- Vera Lynn (1917–2020), English singer
- Vera Lysklætt (born 1954), Norwegian politician
M[edit]
- Vera Mackey, Irish camogie player
- Vera MacLeavy (1919–2008), English librarian and Moravian Church archivist
- Vera Malinovskaya (1900–1988), Russian silent film actress
- Vera Manuel (1949–2010), Canadian First Nations writer
- Vera Maretskaya (1906–1978), Russian actress
- Vera Laughton Mathews (1888–1959), English Women's Royal Naval Service officer
- Vera Nikolaevna Maslennikova (1926–2000), Russian mathematician
- Vera Matović (born 1946), Serbian folk singer
- Vera Maxwell (1901–1995), American sportswear and fashion designer
- Vera McKechnie (born 1929), British children's television presenter
- Vera Menchik (1906–1944), British chess player
- Vera Michalski (born 1954), Swiss publisher
- Vera Miles (born 1929), American actress
- Vera Mischenko, Russian attorney and environmentalist
- Vera Misevich (1945–1995), Ukrainian equestrian
- Vera Moskalyuk (born 1981), Ukrainian-born Russian judoka
- Vera Mukhina (1889–1953), Russian sculptor
- Vera Myller (1880–1970), Russian mathematician who became the first female professor in Romania
N[edit]
- Véra Nabokov (1902–1991), wife, editor, and translator of Vladimir Nabokov
- Vera Nazarian (born 1966), Russian-born American fantasy and science fiction writer
- Vera Nazina (born 1931), Russian painter
- Vera Nebolsina (born 1989), Russian chess player
- Vera Neumann (born 1907), American fashion designer
- Vera Nikolić (born 1948), Serbian track and field athlete
- Vera Nikolić Podrinska (1886–1972), Croatian painter and baroness
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O[edit]
- Vera Olcott (1893–19?), American dancer
- Vera Olsson (born 1974), Finnish television producer and television host
- Vera Georgiyevna Orlova (1894—1977), Russian Soviet actress
- Vera Markovna Orlova (1918—1993), Soviet Russian actress
- Vera Osoianu, Moldovan librarian, activist and writer
P[edit]
- Vera Page (1921-1931), British murder victim
- Vera Jayne Palmer (1933–1967), birth name of Jayne Mansfield, American actress
- Vera Panova (1905–1973), Soviet novelist, playwright, and journalist
- Vera Pauw (born 1963), Dutch football coach and former player
- Vera Pavlova (born 1963), Russian poet
- Vera Pearce (1895–1966), Australian stage and film actress
- Vera Perlin (1902–1974), Canadian humanitarian
- Vera Pezer (born 1939), Canadian curler and academic
- Vera Pless (born 1931), American mathematician
- Vera Popkova (1943–2011), Soviet track and field athlete
- Vera Popova (1867–1896), Russian chemist
- Vera Pospíšilová-Cechlová (born 1978), Czech athlete
- Vera Putina (born 1926), Georgian woman who claims that Vladimir Putin is her lost son
R[edit]
- Vera Hruba Ralston (1919–2003), Czech-American skater and actress
- Vera Ramaciotti (1891—1982), Australian philanthropist
- Vera Renczi, Romanian serial killer
- Vera Reynolds (1899–1962), American film actress
- Vera Rich (1936–2009), British poet, journalist, historian, and translator
- Vera Ellen Westmeier Rohe (known as Vera-Ellen, 1921–1981), American actress
- Vera Rózsa (1917–2010), Hungarian singer
- Vera Rubin (1928-2016), American astronomer
- Věra Růžičková (born 1928), Czech gymnast
S[edit]
- Vera Beaudin Saeedpour (1930–2010), American researcher and scholar
- Vera Salvequart (1919–1947), Czech-born German concentration camp nurse executed for war crimes
- Vera Santos (born 1981), Portuguese race walker
- Alina Vera Savin (born 1988), Romanian bobsledder
- Vera Scarth-Johnson (1912–1999), British-born Australian botanist and botanical illustrator
- Vera Schmidt (born 1982), Hungarian singer-songwriter
- Vera Schmidt (psychoanalyst) (1889–1937), Russian educationist and psychoanalyst
- Vera Schmiterlöw (1904–1987), Swedish actress
- Vera Schwarcz (born 1947), Romanian-born American sinologist and academic
- Vera Sessina (born 1986), Russian gymnast
- Vera Sheehan, Irish camogie player
- Vera Shimanskaya (born 1981), Russian rhythmic gymnast
- Vera Brady Shipman (1889-1932), American composer, journalist, and writer
- Vera Shitjeni (born 1974), Albanian politician
- Vera Shtelbaums (born 1937), Russian rhythmic gymnastics coach
- Vera Shvetsova (born 1929), Russian ballet teacher and balletmaster
- Eleonora Vera Sipos (1900–1988), New Zealand businesswoman, humanitarian and welfare worker
- Vera Sisson (1891–1954), American film actress of the silent era
- Vera Slutskaya (1874–1917), Russian revolutionary
- Vera Šnajder (1904–1976), Bosnian mathematician
- Vera Sobetova (born 1992), Russian sprint canoeist
- Vera Sokolova (born 1987), Russian race walker
- Vera T. Sós (born 1930), Hungarian mathematician
- Vera Sotnikova (born 1960), Soviet (Russian) theatre, television and movie actress
- Věra Soukupová (born 1932), Czech mezzo-soprano
- Vera Stanley Alder (1898–1984), English portrait painter and mystic
- Vera Steadman (1900–1966), American film actress of the silent era
- Vera Storozheva (born 1958), Russian actress and film director
- Vera Stroyeva (1903–1991), Soviet film director and screenwriter
- Vera Suchánková (born 1932), Czechoslovak pair skater
- Věra Suková (1931–1982), Czech tennis player
- Vera Summers (born 1899), Australian high school teacher and principal
- Vera Szemere (1923–1995), Hungarian actress
T[edit]
- Vera Telenius (1912–1991), Finnish singer
- Vera Thomas (1921-1995), English table tennis player
- Vera Thulin (1893–1974), Swedish freestyle swimmer
- Vera Timanova (1855–1942), Russian pianist
- Vera Trefilova (1875–1943), Russian dancer and teacher
- Vera Tschechowa (born 1940), German film actress
U[edit]
- Vera Ulyakina (born 1986), Russian volleyball player
V[edit]
- Vera Vague (1906–1974), American actress, also known by her real name of Barbara Jo Allen
- Věra Vančurová (born 1932), Czech gymnast
- Vera Vasilchikova (1780–1814), Russian minor aristocrat
- Vera Veljkov-Medaković (1923–2011), Serbian pianist and piano teacher
- Vera Venczel (born 1946), Hungarian actress
- Vera Viczián (born 1972), Hungarian cross country skier
- Vera Volkova (1905–1975), Russian ballet dancer and dance teacher
- Vera Voronina (1905–?), Russian actress
- Věra Votrubcová, Czechoslovak table tennis player
- Věra Vovsová (1912–1998), Czech painter
W[edit]
- Vera Wang (born 1949), American fashion designer
- Vera Weizmann (1881–1966), Russian-born Israeli medical doctor and a Zionist activist
- Vera White (1893-1949), American silent film actress
- Vera Williams (born 1927), American children's writer and illustrator
- Vera Woodhouse, Lady Terrington (1889–1973), British Liberal Party politician
Y[edit]
- Vera Yurasova (born 1928), Russian physicist
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Z[edit]
- Vera Zasulich (1849–1919), Russian Marxist writer and revolutionary
- Vera Zavitsianou (1927–2008), Greek Greek theatre actress
- Vera Zhelikhovsky (1835–1896), Russian writer
- Vera Zorina (1917–2003), American actress
- Vera Zorina (singer) (1853–1903), Russian operetta singer
- Vera Zozulya (born 1956), Latvian-born Soviet luger
- Vera Zvonareva (born 1984), Russian tennis player
Fictional characters[edit]
- Vera, a character on the Spanish children's television program Barrio Sésamo
- Vera, a character from Tolstoy's novel War and Peace
- Vera, a character from Lermontov's novel A Hero of Our Time
- Vera is the name given to a gun by Jayne Cobb in the television show Firefly
- Vera Adare, character from V.C. Andrews' standalone novel, My Sweet Audrina
- Vera Claythorne, character from Agatha Christie's novel And Then There Were None
- Vera Dietz, the titular character of the young adult novel by A.S. King, Please Ignore Vera Dietz
- Vera Donovan, a character from Stephen King's novel Dolores Claiborne
- Vera Douka, fictional character in the ANT1 television series Erotas
- Vera Drake, title character of a 2004 British Mike Leigh film
- Vera Duckworth, a character from the British soap opera, Coronation Street
- Vera Juarez, character from the British television soap opera Torchwood: Miracle Day
- Vera Keyes, a character from Fallout: New Vegas of the DLC, Dead Money
- Vera, one of the 'Macaw Sisters' played by Anna Stolli in the original 2015 Edinburgh cast of Love Birds: the musical
- Vera Möldersm, a character from Strike Witches
- Vera Peterson, an unseen character on the television show Cheers
- Vera Sweet, a character from DC Comics, and love interest to the Creeper
- Vera Stanhope, character in a series of detective novels by Ann Cleeves and the television series Vera based on these novels
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges: Oxford Dictionary of First Names (2003)
- ^Hanks, Patrick (2006). A Dictionary of First Names. Oxford University Press.
- ^ abIn the Russian language, Vera may also be a diminutive of the male first names Avenir and Averky.
- ^http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=very
Why Vera?
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We are agents of change, fighting for transformation of the criminal legal and immigration systems during a pivotal moment in American history. At the Vera Institute of Justice, our commitment to securing equal justice is what drives every task, every meeting, every initiative we take on. And critical to our success are our people—a diverse, talented pool of employees who share that vision and passion.
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The Vera Institute of Justice is taking the steps necessary to live up to our mission of racial equity and striving to become a more antiracist institution every day. At Vera, we value antiracism, equity, and diversity across all races, genders, sexualities, abilities, and criminal legal and immigration systems. Vera is committed to shaping space, resources, and work—internally and externally—to ensure that each person can thrive in their own identities, circumstances and histories, such that disparities are eliminated and we all prosper.
We are taking purposeful action through our Race, Equity & Inclusion (REI) Initiative to identify inequities perpetuated by our organization and develop policies or practices to advance antiracist and equity principles in our workplace and work. And we are developing an REI Strategy & Action Plan, which will serve as an ever-developing equity guidebook and accountability document for our organization.
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The Vera Institute of Justice, which has more than 280 staff members, is an equal opportunity employer with a dedication to diversity in the workplace. We expect our staff to embody respect, independence, collaboration, commitment, antiracism, and equity—both in our outward-facing work and the internal culture of our workplace. We value diverse experiences in people’s educational backgrounds and encourage people who have been directly impacted by the criminal legal and immigration systems to apply.
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Vera employees, in their casual to business-casual dress, work across four offices—in Brooklyn, New Orleans, Washington, DC, and Los Angeles—as well as remotely. Learn more about each office below.
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share similar experiences, backgrounds, or
identities can connect with one another for
support, networking, or other resources - Monthly staff breakfasts
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