Audrey
Audrey | |
---|---|
Gender | Feminine |
Language(s) | English |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Old English |
Word/name | Æðelþryð |
Derivation | æðel + þryð |
Meaning | "noble" |
Other names | |
Related names | Etheldreda, Ethel, Audie, Audra, Audrea |
Look up Audrey in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Audrey /ˈɔːdri/ is an English feminine given name. It is the Anglo-Norman form of the Anglo-Saxon name Æðelþryð, composed of the elements æðel "noble" and þryð "strength". The Anglo-Norman form of the name was applied to Saint Audrey (d. 679), also known by the historical form of her name as Saint Æthelthryth. The same name also survived into the modern period in its Anglo-Saxon form, as Etheldred,[1] e.g. Etheldred Benett (1776–1845).
In the 17th century, the name of Saint Audrey gave rise to the adjective tawdry "cheap and pretentious; cheaply adorned" (after a fair of St. Audrey where cheap lace was sold). As a consequence, use of the name declined, but it was revived in the 19th century. Popularity of the name in the United States peaked in the interbellum period, but it fell below rank 100 in popularity by 1940 and was not frequently given in the later half of the 20th century; Audrey was the 173rd most common name for females in the United States in the 1990 census. its popularity has again been on the rise since the 2000s, reaching rank 100 in 2002 and rank 41 in 2012. It was also ranked in the top 100 most common names for girls in France, Belgium, and Canada in the 2000s.[2]
List of people with the given name Audrey
- Audrey Assad (1983- ), American contemporary Christian musician
- Audrey Brown (1913–2005), British athlete
- Audrey Emery (1904-1971), American socialite and wife of Dmitri Pavlovich of Russia
- Audrey Flack (1931- ), American artist
- Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993), actress and fashion model
- Audrey Faith Hill (née Perry) (1967- ), American country singer and model
- Audrey Kitching (1985- ), model, fashion designer, fashion blogger
- Audrey Landers (1956- ), American actress
- Audrey Lawson-Johnston (1915- ), last survivor of the shipwreck Lusitania
- Audrey Long (1922- ), American actress
- Audrey Malte (Etheldreda Malte, died c. 1555), alleged illegitimate daughter of Henry VIII and a royal laundress
- Audrey McLaughlin (1936- ), Canadian politician, former leader of the New Democratic Party
- Audrey Meadows (1922-1996), American actress
- Audrey Meaney (1931- ) British archaeologist
- Audrey Mestre (1974–2002), French athlete
- Audrey de Montigny (1985- ), French-Canadian singer
- Audrey Munson (1891–1996), American model and actress
- Audrey Niffenegger (1963- ), American novelist
- Audrey Patterson (1926–1996), American athlete
- Audrey Penn (1947- ) American author
- Audrey Richards (1899–1984), British anthropologist
- Audrey Tautou, French actress (1976/8- )
- Audrey Tang (1981- ) Taiwanese software programer
- Audrey Terras (1942- ) American mathematician
- Audrey Totter, (1918-2013 ) American actress
- Audrey Wasilewski (1967- ) American voice actress
- Audrey Wells (1960- ), American film director
- Audrey Williamson (1926- ), British athlete
- Audrey Ooi, Nuffnang blogger
- Fictional characters
- Audrey, a character in Shakespeare's As You Like It
- Audrey, a 1902 book by Mary Johnston, or the film of it made in 1916
- Audrey Cheng, a character in the Power of Five novels
- Audrey Fulquard, heroine of The Little Shop of Horrors, and her namesake "Audrey Jr." or "Audrey II"
- Audrey Hanson, a character in television series Heroes
- Audrey Gordon, played by Heidi Areana in the satirical Australian television cooking series Audrey's Kitchen
- Audrey Horne, a character on the television series Twin Peaks
- Audrey Roberts, a character on the British soap opera Coronation Street
- Audrey Raines, a character in television series 24
- Audrey Reede, a character in the film Liar Liar
- Audrey Turfe, a character in Ben Jonson's A Tale of a Tub
- Little Audrey, a cartoon character who was mainly popular during the 1950s and 1960s.
See also
- Audre Lorde (1934–1992), Caribbean-American writer
- Audre Trupin, birthname of Pinny Cooke (1923–2004), New York politician
- Æthelred
- Aldred