Evelyn
WiktionaryText

Etymology


Medieval English form of the female name , diminutive of the Germanic root avi, of uncertain meaning, possibly "desired, wished for" , or aval "strength". By folk etymology the female name is seen as a diminutive of Eve.

Proper noun



  1. .
  2. , transferred from the surname.

Quotations

  • 1855 Robert Browning: Evelyn Hope:
    Beautiful Evelyn Hope is dead!
    Sit and watch by her side an hour.
  • 1980 Salman Rushdie: Midnight's Children. Alfred A.Knopf 1981. ISBN 0-394-51470-X page 179:
    "I don't wear flowers," Evelyn Lilith said, and tossed the unwanted chain into the air, spearing it before it fell with a pellet from her unerring Daisy air-pistol. Destroying flowers with a Daisy, she served notice that she was not to be manacled, not even by a necklace: she was our capricious, whirligig Lill-of-the-Hill. And also Eve. The Adam's-apple of my eye.

Proper noun



  1. borrowed from .


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Proper noun



  1. borrowed from .
 
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