Character Name
Jeannine
Jeannine Jeannine has the gentle warmth of a mid-20th-century French feminine name — not as grandly historical as Jeanne, not as modern as Juliette, but carrying a homespun French provinciality that suits stories of ordinary women living extraordinary inner lives. Characters with this name project sincerity, domestic warmth, and a quiet resilience rooted in the everyday traditions of French bourgeois or working-class life.
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Famous characters named Jeannine
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More French names
Nicole
“Nicole is a French feminine given name, the French feminine form of Nicolas (Nicholas), from the Greek Nikolaos — composed of nike meaning "victory" and laos meaning "people" — thus "victory of the people". Nicole was one of the most popular French feminine names of the mid-20th century, becoming internationally familiar and widely used across the French-speaking world. In France it carries the warmth of a classic mid-century name.”
Antoine
“Antoine is the French form of Anthony, from the Latin Antonius — an ancient Roman family name of uncertain etymology, possibly of Etruscan origin. Saint Anthony of Padua, one of the most beloved saints in the Catholic world, gave the name enormous popular resonance. In France, the name has been carried by philosophers, playwrights, and revolutionaries, including the chemist Antoine Lavoisier and the writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.”
Ingrid
“Ingrid is a Scandinavian feminine name, from the Old Norse Ingríðr — composed of Ing (a Norse fertility god, ancestor of the Ingvaeones) and fríðr meaning "beautiful, beloved". The name entered French use through Scandinavian royal connections and the global fame of Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman, who starred in French films and became one of cinema's most beloved figures. It is used as a given name in France with a distinctly cosmopolitan, northern European flavor.”
Virginie
“Virginie is the French feminine form of Virginia, derived from the Roman family name Virginius, possibly from the Latin virgo meaning "virgin" or "maiden". The name gained literary fame through Bernardin de Saint-Pierre's 1788 novel Paul et Virginie, one of the most beloved French novels of the 18th century, whose heroine became an archetype of natural innocence and tragic purity.”
Therese
“Thérèse is the French feminine form of Teresa, of uncertain but likely Greek origin — possibly from theresia meaning "harvester" or from the island of Thera (Santorini). Saint Thérèse of Lisieux (1873–1897), the "Little Flower", whose autobiography The Story of a Soul became one of the most widely read spiritual texts of the 20th century, made the name deeply beloved in France. Thérèse Raquin gave it a darker literary dimension.”
Sophie
“Sophie is the French form of Sophia, from the Greek sophia meaning "wisdom". In France and across the German-speaking world, Sophie became one of the most beloved feminine names, carried by queens, philosophers' wives, and fictional heroines. Tolstoy's War and Peace and countless French novels feature Sophies as emblems of refined, good-natured intelligence.”
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