Andrew

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek Ἀνδρέας (Andréas), cognate with ἀνδρεῖος (andreîos, manly), both from ἀνήρ (anḗr, man)

Pronunciation

  • enPR: ăn'dro͞o, IPA(key): [ˈeᵊnˌdʒɹʊ̈u], IPA(key): [ˈænˌdʒɹʊ̈u]

Proper noun

Andrew

  1. A male given name.
    • 1890 John Davidson, Perfervid: The Career of Ninian Jamieson, Ward and Downey 1890, page 94:
      I like him - I like a man who can be extreme. Depend upon it, Miss Mercer - but what is his first name?" "Andrew." "A good name, though common - there is a possibility of a sound reputation in Andrew Morton, especially if he narrows himself down to a point - - -
    • 1966 Ester Wier, The Barrel, D. McCay Co. 1966, page 57:
      "Well, I'd say he ought to have a Scottish name like Andrew or Bruce or Sandy...or...Duncan...or Angus or..." He ticked them off on his fingers as they came to mind.
    • 1985 Ed McBain, Eight Black Horses, Simon&Schuster 2003, →ISBN, page 138-139:
      Lloyd was a piss-ant name. Andrew was better because Andrew was one of the twelve apostles, and anybody with a twelve-apostle name was a good guy. If you were reading a book - which Parker rarely did - and you ran across a guy named Luke, Matthew, Thomas, Peter, Paul, James, like that, you knew right off he was supposed to be a good guy. - - - He would have preferred to be called Andrew, which was his true and honorable middle name.
    • 2015 Joyce Carol Oates, Jack of Spades, Head of Zeus →ISBN page 104:
      "Irina? Call me 'Andy,' please."
      "I think that I would rather call you 'Andrew'."
      This was flattering, somehow. For everyone I knew called me "Andy"―a name comfortable as an old sneaker. There was dignity in "Andrew," and a kind of depth, complexity. Perhaps I began to fall in love with Irina Kacinzk for seeing more in me than I saw in myself at the time.
  2. The first Apostle in the New Testament.
  3. A patronymic surname.
  4. A village in Alberta, Canada
  5. A city in Iowa
  6. An unincorporated community in West Virginia

Derived terms

surnames

Translations

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Anagrams

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