Louise
WiktionaryText

Proper noun



  1. borrowed from the feminine form of Louis.

Usage notes


Used in English since the seventeenth century, more in the U.K. than in the U.S.A. A common middle name today.

Quotations

  • 1890 Arthur Weir, John Arthur Lockhart: The Romance of Sir Richard. Published by William Drysdale&Co. page 83:
    Louise, thy stately name sounds in my ear / Like a sea wave, that gathering, hill on hill, / Upon the blue horizon, smooth and still, / Sweeps to the shore
  • 1991 Emily Ellison, The Picture Makers, G.K.Hall, ISBN 0816151660, page 111:
    I've always thought I was too large for a soft, musical name like Louise, too untidy.

Proper noun



  1. of origin.


----

Proper noun



  1. , feminine form of Louis.

Proper noun



  1. borrowed from .


----

Proper noun



  1. borrowed from .


----

Proper noun



  1. borrowed from .
 
x
OK