More than 50 grave markers have been stolen from a churchyard in West Sussex. The metal plaques were taken on Tuesday afternoon from the churchyard of St Margaret's in North Lane, West Hoathly. A ...
On an ancient tombstone hidden away in a churchyard, an accusation rings out from beyond the grave. Written on the 256-year-old grave of Sarah Smith is the extraordinary claim that the buried girl was ...
Gabrielle is beautiful! I love Gabrielle Rose. Classic and sweet. I also love Gabrielle Victoria, Gabrielle Christina, Gabrielle Mae, Gabrielle Jane, Gabrielle Katherine, Gabrielle Francesca, Gabrielle Elizabeth, Gabrielle Cecilia, Gabrielle Bridget, Gabrielle Margaret, Gabrielle Claire/Clara, Gabrielle Maeve, and Gabrielle Fiona.
I was wondering if any of you had considered using some of the older, more vintage nicknames for classic names even if they don't necessarily sound like the original. For example: Margaret nn Daisy Mary nn Molly or Polly Sarah nn Sally or Sadie Charlotte nn Lottie I think several of these are adorable but I'm curious to see what y'all think.
Margaret is the only name I've ever heard that uses the NN Maggie. I'm a Megan and I've never had anyone call me Maggie before but I have heard stories.
Anna is the most beautiful, IMO. Claire is my second choice. I dislike Molly. Unless you name her Margaret or something so she can have a more formal name for her resume.
Here are some that I do love. Elizabeth Catherine Caitlin Juliet Julie Marie Caroline Audrey Rachel Jillian Julianne Felicity Valerie Paige Violet Charlotte Lucy Melanie Mallory Leanne Anne Naomi Abigail Helen Bethany Natalie Heidi Lillian Emily Louise Grace Claire Hope Brooke Faith Holly Noelle Camille Molly Hailey Christine Alice Margaret ...
I'm Margaret (nn Maggie), but next time I move or start a new job, I would consider going by either my legal name or a different nickname (Meg, Margot). Has anyone else decided to go by a different name?
Both are family names for us. Other Mary names I've known and liked include: Mary Elizabeth (called Mary Beth, Mary Lib, or Mary Liza) Mary Winstead (Mary Win) Mary Stuart Mary Katherine (Mary Kate) Mary Brent Mary Ellis Mary Margaret Mary Hayden Mary Mitchell I personally really like the combo of Mary with a family surname. Very Southern.
Other suggestions: Margaret (plenty of cute nicknames here: Meg, Margot, Maggie, Greta, etc.) Aurelia Jane Matilda (nn could be Tillie) As for boys, I love the name Theodore - and love the nn Theo! Other classic but uncommon boy names: Francis Eli Leland Oliver (pretty common now, though) August (nn Gus?)
Re: Twin Names to go with Amelia canarygirl member December 2014 Mary Louise Vera Louise Nora Louise Diana Louise Margaret Louise I think I love Amelia and Nora!
I just got back from Key West and kept the street map so I could post the women's names of different streets. Here they are: Julia Virginia Amelia Emma Petronia Angela Catherine Louisa Margaret Alberta Eliza Olivia Elizabeth Rose There were only two men's named streets (but many last names, like Flager, for Henry Flager): William George Report ...
Josephine is very pretty, and I love the NN Josie. What about Margaret/Marguerite (Maggie) or Cecilia (Cece)?
empty, vacant, blank, void, vacuous mean lacking contents which could or should be present. empty suggests a complete absence of contents.
Description: Select all elements that have no children (including text nodes). This is the inverse of :parent. One important thing to note with :empty (and :parent) is that child elements include text nodes.
These adjectives mean without contents that could or should be present. Empty is the broadest and can apply to what lacks contents (an empty box), occupants (an empty seat), or substance (an empty promise).
He says his life has been completely empty since his wife died. I felt empty, like a part of me had died.
Adjective empty (comparative emptier, superlative emptiest) A man sitting in an empty room (1) Devoid of content; containing nothing or nobody; vacant.
Find 219 different ways to say EMPTY, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com.
There are 29 meanings listed in OED's entry for the word empty, six of which are labelled obsolete. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.
empty, adj. & n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
emp′ti a ble, adj. emp′ti er, n. emp′ti ly, adv. emp′ti ness, n. 1. vacuous. Empty, vacant, blank, void denote absence of content or contents.
Empty is the opposite of full and is used to describe anything that has a complete absence of contents. Sometimes, empty has slightly different specific meanings depending on context. For example, an empty room might only lack people or it might be totally bare, with no furniture.
If you feel empty, you feel unhappy and have no energy, usually because you are very tired or have just experienced something upsetting. I felt empty and hollow; defeated. I feel so empty, my life just doesn't seem worth living any more.
Bleeping Computer: Firefox 67 Switching to Empty Profiles Causing Data Loss Fears