Alois Nestor

suchtrashley

Basic Info


Full Name

Alois Jaromir Vassilios Nestor

Nickname/s

Lois, Nessie,

Gender

Male

Age

Birthday

10th January

Species

Luminette

Sexuality

Occupation

Stitcher

Profile


Traits
Ears | Furry | Uncommon
Tail | Standard | Common
Extra | Magien Feelers (Ears) | Super Rare
Gems | Moon

Personality: 

Likes: Books, the desert during the night, 

Dislikes: The desert during the day (for the heat, mostly), 

Miscellaneous: - Makes protective and useful items and accessories with various leathers, fabrics, fibres, and any other manner of bits and bobs he comes across (either salvaged or traded).

Name Etymology: - Alois (Latinized Aloysius) is an Old Occitan form of the name Louis. Louis is the French form of the Old Frankish given name Chlodowig and one of two English forms, the other being Lewis. The Frankish name is composed of the words for "fame" (hlōd) and "warrior" (wīg) which may be translated to famous warrior or "famous in battle".
- Jaromír is a West Slavic given name composed of two stems jaro and mír. The meaning is not definite:

  • Polish jary (archaic) = "spry, young, strong“; mir = "prestige, good reputation“
  • Upper Sorbian jara = "very“; měr = "peace“
  • old-Ruthenian jaro = "sun“; mir = "peace, world“;
  • In the Czech, the name is seemingly composed from two other words. Word Jaro means "spring“ and word mír means "peace“.
  • The short form is Jesko. Jesko or Jesco is a male given name, which is used in Bosnia and Germany, and may mean "the peaceful one", "the brave one", "the proud one" or "the soldierly one".

- Vassilios or Vassileios, is a Greek given name, the origin of Basil. In ancient/medieval/Byzantine context, it is also transliterated as Basileios. It is directly descended from the word "Kingdom".
- Nestor is a given name of Greek origin. In Greek mythology it comes from that of Nestor, the son of Neleus, the King of Pylos and Chloris. The Greek derivation is from a combination of "νέομαι" [neomai] - "go back", and "νόστος" [nostos] - "one who returns from travels". Another theory makes derivation from Hebrew by combination of "נֵס" [nes] - "miracle", and "תּוֹרָה" [tora] - Torah.