Hmmm...my only
Perdita association is the dalmation and it seems the "
DEE" sound was stressed rather than the "PUR". I'll try getting accustomed to it with the stress on the first syllable and see which of these stand out...
Perdita Beatrix - not usually a
Beatrix fan, but this feels/sounds fitting; some spunk here
Perdita Blythe - happy to be lost?; enjoying the sound
Perdita Catherine - this actually feels kind of poetic to me; full disclosure for honest opinion purposes - it did occur to me that she'd have
Catherine to fall back on if she wasn't thrilled with
Perdita when she grew up
Perdita Cecile - don't like
Cecile but she sounds well here; exotic; lost and blind is a bit much, though; I admit I would think a
Perdita Cecile came from an upper crust family
Perdita Clare - the optimistic, friendly lost soul
Perdita Clothilde - lost but able to handle whatever's thrown at her; ditto upper crust
Perdita Delphine - if found, please return to Delphi; seriously, I'm enjoying the echo of the "d" sound and the flow of this
Perdita Diane - lost by the light of the moon; makes me think of "Moon Shadow"
Perdita Dorothy - how can I resist? She's geographically challenged, but happens to be in possession of some fabulously handy footwear! enjoying the echo "d" again; nice flow with the stress on the first syllable; this may be it.
Perdita Eloise - nice flow, adds elegance
Perdita Emmeline - ditto
Perdita Eugenie - of the royal family
Perdita Francine - ditto
Perdita Henriette - hope this doesn't offend you, but I just saw a lovely homing pigeon
Perdita Iris - home is somewhere over the rainbow
Perdita Jane - elegant simplicity
Perdita Lucy - likes to skip; light on her feet
Perdita Maxine - also of the royal family
Perdita Rosalie - enjoying sounds and flow here; a free spirit, methinks
Perdita Susan - sunshine and cheerfulness