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  2. Snoopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snoopy

    Snoopy is a loyal, imaginative, and good-natured beagle who is prone to imagining fantasy lives, including being an author, a college student known as "Joe Cool", an attorney, and a World War I flying ace. He is perhaps best known in this last persona, wearing an aviator's helmet and goggles and a scarf while carrying a swagger stick (like a ...

  3. Leslie (name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_(name)

    Leslie is a surname and given name, derived from the name of Clan Leslie. The name may also be spelled Lesley. The name derives from a placename in Aberdeenshire, [1] perhaps an anglicisation of an originally Gaelic leas celyn "holly-garden". [2] Leslie is also frequently used as an anglicization of the male name Ladislaus, or its variant László.

  4. Kathleen (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathleen_(given_name)

    Kathy. Kathleen is a female given name, used in English - and Irish -language communities. Sometimes spelled Cathleen, it is an Anglicized form of Caitlín, the Irish form of Cateline, which was the Old French form of Catherine. [ 1][ 2] It ultimately derives from the Greek name Aikaterine, the meaning of which is highly debated (see Katherine ).

  5. Ashley (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley_(given_name)

    In the 1940s, Americans started using the Ashley for girls and was more common for girls starting in 1964. [7] Ashley was considered a surname style name at the time. [8] In the 1980s the name had a rise in popularity attributed to the female soap opera character Ashley Abbott who emerged on the still-running TV series The Young and the Restless in 1982. [9]

  6. Spencer (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spencer_(given_name)

    Spencer is a given name of British origin, that means "steward" or "administrator". It is a shortened form of the English word dispenser, which derives from Anglo-French dispensour, from Old French dispenseor, from Latin dispensatorem, the agent noun of dispensare, meaning "to disperse, administer, and distribute (by weight)". [ 1]

  7. Roxanne (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roxanne_(given_name)

    Roxanne (given name) ”Roxanne” is a feminine given name. It is derived from the Greek name Rhōxanē (Latinised to Roxana), used for Roxana, one of Cambyses's wifes, the daughter of Idérnēs, a sister of one sister of king Mithridates VI, and the wife of Alexander the Great. The name originates from the Old Iranian Raṷxšnā-, meaning ...

  8. Francis (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_(given_name)

    Francis is an English given name of Latin origin. Francis is a name that has many derivatives in most European languages. A feminine version of the name in English is Frances, or (less commonly) Francine. [4] (For most speakers, Francis and Frances are homophones or near homophones; a popular mnemonic for the spelling is "i for him and e for her".)

  9. Eugene (given name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_(given_name)

    Eugene is a common male given name that comes from the Greek εὐγενής ( eugenēs ), "noble", literally "well-born", [ 1] from εὖ ( eu ), "well" [ 2] and γένος ( genos ), "race, stock, kin". [ 3] Gene is a common shortened form. The feminine variant is Eugenia or Eugenie . Egon, a common given name in parts of central and northern ...