Guido is a given name. It has been a male first name in Italy, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, Argentina, the Low Countries, Scandinavia, Spain, Portugal and Latin America, as well as other places with migration from those. Regarding origins, there are most likely homonymous forms of it, that is, from several etymological predecessors but now seeming to be the same name. One of the likely homonyms is Germanic Guido representing the Latinisation from the Old High German name Wido,[1] which meant "wood" (that is, "forest"). Another likely homonym is the Italian Guido from a latinate root for "guide".[2] The third likely homonym is the Italian Guido with phonetic correspondence to Latin Vitus, whereas the Latin v (/w/), the Latin i (/iː/), and the terminal syllable -tus have predictable homology with the Italian /u/, /iː/, and -do. Thus, for example, Saint Vitus has also been known in Italian as Guido.
The slang term Guido is used in American culture to refer derogatorily to an urban working-class Italian or Italian-American male who is overly aggressive or macho with a tendency for certain conspicuous behaviour.[3] It may also be used as a more general ethnic slur for working-class urban Italian Americans.[4]
People
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Given name
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Medieval times
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Guido (composer) (c. 1372–1374), French composer and cantor
Guido of Acqui (c. 1004–1070), bishop of Acqui, Italy
Guido of Anderlecht (c. 950–1012), Belgian saint
Guido of Arezzo (c. 991/992–after 1033), Italian music theorist
Guido da Velate, (died 1071) bishop of Milan
Guido Bonatti (died c. 1298), Italian mathematician, astronomer and astrologer
Guido Cavalcanti (c. 1250s–1300), Italian (Florentine) poet and friend of Dante
Guido delle Colonne (fl. 1287), Italian writer and contemporary of Dante
Guido I da Montefeltro (1223–1298), advisor to Pope Boniface VIII
Guido di Pietro (c. 1395–1455), Italian Renaissance painter better known as Fra Angelico
Guido of Pisa (d. 1169), Italian geographer
Guido of Siena, 13th-century Italian painter
Guido II of Spoleto (died 882), Duke of Spoleto and Margrave of Camerino
Guy III of Spoleto (died 895), King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor
Later use
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Guido Alvarenga (born 1970), Paraguayan footballer
Guido Andreozzi (born 1991), Argentine tennis player
Guido Barreyro (born 1988), Argentine footballer
Guido Beck (1903–1988), Argentine physicist
Guido de Bres (1522–1567), Belgian pastor, theologian, author of Belgic Confession
Guido Buchwald (born 1961) German footballer
Guido Buscaglia (born 1996), Argentine swimmer
Guido Cagnacci (1601–1663), Italian painter
Guido Calabresi (born 1932), American judge and former Dean of Yale Law School
Guido Calza (1888–1946) Italian archaeologist
Guido Cannetti (born 1979), Argentine mixed martial artist
Guido Cantelli (1920–1956), Italian orchestral conductor
Guido Cantz (born 1971), German television presenter
Guido Carrillo (born 1991), Argentine footballer
Guido Castelnuovo (1865–1952), Italian mathematician
Guido Corteggiano (born 1987), Argentine footballer
Guido Cortese (1908–1964), Italian lawyer and politician
^Libby Copeland (6 July 2003). "Strutting Season". The Washington Post. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
Name list
This page or section lists people that share the same given name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article.
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