Eugenia [yoo-jee-nee-uh, -jeen-yuh] Examples noun
- a female given name: from a Greek word meaning “nobility.”
Also Eu·ge·nie [yoo-jee-nee] /yuˈdʒi ni/. Examples from the Web for eugenia Contemporary Examples of eugenia
Right now, only Linda, Catherine, Sarah, Eugenia, and Mary-Beth.
Nathaniel Stein
June 12, 2013
“Terrible shall be the fate of the enemies of Social Unionism” is one of the rhetorical cries of Eugenia.
Douglas Murray
September 28, 2010
Historical Examples of eugenia
However, besides Mildred there was Eugenia who could be appealed to for aid.
The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army
Margaret Vandercook
Moreover, there was the chance of every now and then seeing her beloved Eugenia.
The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army
Margaret Vandercook
But Eugenia had rigid views of life and was not given to concealing them.
The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army
Margaret Vandercook
I will not quit this spot—no, Eugenia, I will preserve or perish with thee!
The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor
Stephen Cullen Carpenter
It had been nearly a year since Lloyd had had a letter from Eugenia.
The Little Colonel’s Christmas Vacation
Annie Fellows Johnston
Word Origin and History for eugenia Eugenia
fem. proper name, from Latin, from Greek Eugenia, literally “nobility of birth,” fem. of Eugenius (see Eugene).