Meaning and origin
Simone is a French girl name. The meaning of the name is `Listener`.
Where is it used? The name Simone is mainly used in French.
How do they say it elsewhere? Semyon (In Russian) Simão (In Portuguese) Szymon (In Polish) Shimon (In Jewish) Simo (In Finnish) Simon (In English, French, Scandinavian, Hungarian and in the bible) Siemen (In Dutch) Simeon (In the bible) Ximun (In Basque)
For the opposite sex use: In Spanish: Ximena (F) In Italian, English, Romanian, Czech and in Slovene: Simona (F) In English: Cymone (F)
Extra information: Alternative meanings (Italian) Listener
What Simone`s say about their name
The best thing about the name Simone: Its an unusual french name and guys always compliment me on it lol
The worst thing about the name: some people call me Simon!
If my name wasn`t Simone....: I was going to be called Andrea, but i love my name.
Extra information: Simone means `the one who hears` and its actually so true because i hear everything haha
The best thing about the name Simone: It's unusual and very sexy
The worst thing about the name: People prounanuce it wrong sometimes
If my name wasn`t Simone....: My parents thougt of naming me Diana, so i'm glad it's Simone.
Extra information: I'm from Sweden and the last four letters in my name sounds like our swedish word for moon (måne). So people call me Måne (moon) all the tiome, that makes me feel speciell.
The best thing about the name Simone: it's a great name
The worst thing about the name: sometimes people call me simon by mistake
If my name wasn`t Simone....: yes
Extra information:
The best thing about the name Simone: its an unuslla name
The worst thing about the name: people call me simon
If my name wasn`t Simone....: nope
Extra information: simone is a lovely name i wouldnt change it ever
Simone appears in 2007`s top-1000 name list at rank 533.. 1990 was a `top year` for the name Simone. (Based on 128 years of name history) In that year it ranked #348. The last time Simone appeared among the most common names was in 1940. Our records go back to 1880