Agnes (gallery)
WiktionaryText
Etymology
άγνόs = 'pure, chaste'. άγνεία (agnia) = purity, chastity. Name of one of the four great virgin martyrs, by folk etymology associated with Latin agnus "lamb" .
- In Ireland Agnes has been used as an Anglicization of Úna.
Proper noun
- . Popular in the Middle Ages and again at the turn of the 20th century.
Quotations
- 1876 Annie Howells Fréchette, Reuben Dale, Galaxy, W.C. and F.P.Church, 1876, page 394
- "Why do you call Mrs. Stone Aggie? Agnes is such a beautiful name, it is a shame to nick it in that way." Then, quickly regretting his impatience, he added, "You would not have been jealous, would you, Jenny?"
- 1977 Colleen McCullough, The Thorn Birds, Gramercy Books 1998, ISBN 0517201658, pages 3,5
- Right then and there in her mind she had christened it Agnes, the only name she knew elegant enough for such a peerless creature. - - - She held the doll so her brothers could see. "Look, isn't she beautiful? Her name is Agnes."
- "Agnes? Agnes?" Jack gagged realistically. "What a soppy name! Why don't you call her Margaret or Betty?"
- 1995 Elizabeth Wurtzel: Prozac Nation: Young and Depressed in America, Riverhead Books, 1995, ISBN 1573225126, page 14
- I found myself wanting to explain it to her, this middle-aged woman with the kind of haircut you call a hairdo, which needed to be set in rollers every night, who had a name like Agnes or Harriet, a name that even predated my mother's generation.
Proper noun
- , cognate to English Agnes.
Proper noun
- , cognate to Agnes.
Proper noun
- , cognate to Agnes.
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Proper noun
- , cognate to Agnes.