Definition
In Roman culture, a personification of faith or trust as a divine being; the goddess of good faith and honesty.
Etymology
From Latin Fidia or Fides, referring to the Roman goddess. Fidia appears less commonly than Fides but was used in formal religious contexts.
Kelly Says
Romans built temples to Fidia because they understood something modern capitalism often forgets—trust is the actual foundation of all business, law, and society. Faith isn't just religious; it's economic.
Translations
ARالعربية
فيديا
fee-dee-ah
BNবাংলা
ফিডিয়া
fee-dee-ah
CACatalà
fidia
fee-dee-ah
CSČeština
fidia
fee-dee-ah
DEDeutsch
fidia
fee-dee-ah
ELΕλληνικά
φιδία
fee-dee-ah
ESEspañol
fidia
fee-dee-ah
FRFrançais
fidia
fee-dee-ah
HIहिन्दी
फिडिया
fee-dee-ah
HUMagyar
fidia
fee-dee-ah
IDBahasa Indonesia
fidia
fee-dee-ah
ITItaliano
fidia
fee-dee-ah
MSBahasa Melayu
fidia
fee-dee-ah
MYမြန်မာ
ဖီဒီယာ
fee-dee-ya
NLNederlands
fidia
fee-dee-ah
PLPolski
fidia
fee-dee-ah
PTPortuguês
fidia
fee-dee-ah
RORomână
fidia
fee-dee-ah
RUРусский
фидия
fee-dee-ya
SVSvenska
fidia
fee-dee-ah
SWKiswahili
fidia
fee-dee-ah
TAதமிழ்
ஃபீடியா
fee-dee-ah
TEతెలుగు
ఫిడియా
fee-dee-ah
TRTürkçe
fidia
fee-dee-ah
UKУкраїнська
фідія
fee-dee-ya
VITiếng Việt
fidia
fee-dee-ah