Sabrina (given name)
Sabrina is a feminine given name derived from the Romano-British name of the River Severn.[2]
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Language(s) | Romano-British |
Origin | |
Meaning | From the name of River Severn[1] |
Look up Sabrina in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Its genuine origin is Italian. The Arabic and Islamic translation for Sabrina or Sabrine is Sabra or Sabria also written Sabrya deviated from the root Arabic: صَبْرٌ, romanized: ṣabr which means patience.
Etymology
The name of the river is attested as latinized Sabrina in the 2nd century. The reconstructed British form is *sabrinā. The modern Welsh form is Hafren, Habren. Milton adopted the legend in his Comus (1634), using the Latin form Sabrina. Fletcher refers to the legend in The Faithful Shepherdess (1608).
The name was not used in Britain, with the singular exception of Sabrina Sidney (1757–1843), an English foundling girl, named for her orphanage overlooking River Severn, prior to the 19th century, and then very rarely.[3] Its popularity rose, at first in the United States, in the wake of the film Sabrina (1954), a romantic drama-comedy where the protagonist Sabrina Fairchild was played by Audrey Hepburn.
Welsh legend
According to a legend recounted by Geoffrey of Monmouth in the 12th century, Habren was the daughter of a king named Locrinus (also known as Locrin or Locrine in English) by his mistress, the Germanic princess Estrildis. Locrinus ruled England after the death of his father, Brutus of Troy, the legendary second founder of Britain. Locrinus cast aside his wife, Guendolen, and their son Maddan and acknowledged Sabrina and her mother, but the enraged Guendolen raised an army against him and defeated Locrinus in battle. Guendolen then ordered that Sabrina and her mother be drowned in the river. The river was named after Sabrina so Locrine's betrayal of Guendolen would never be forgotten.[4] According to legend, Sabrina lives in the river, which reflects her mood. She rides in a chariot and dolphins and salmon swim alongside her.[5] The later story suggests that the legend of Sabrina could have become intermingled with old stories of a river goddess or nymph.[6]
Popularity
The name gained popularity following the release of the film Sabrina (1954), based on Samuel Taylor's Sabrina Fair (1953).
It was the 789th most popular name for girls born in the United States in 1954, and rose to the 245th most popular name in 1955.[7] Dunkling (1983) notes that "[i]n the U.S. Sabrina has tended to displace Sabina since [the 1950s]."[3]
Its use has continued, boosted by the popularity of the comic book character Sabrina the Teenage Witch, who debuted in 1962. It had peaks in popularity in 1970 (rank 107) and 1977 (rank 63). A television series featured the character in 1996, resulting in a renewed peak in 1997 (rank 53). The name was ranked as the 427th most popular name for U.S.-born girls in 2018.[7] The name peaked in popularity in France in 1979–1981 (rank 8) and in Italy in 2001 (rank 35). In Germany, it peaked in popularity at rank 8 in 1987 and 1989.[2]
People
- Sabrina Sidney (1757–1843), English foundling girl, named for her orphanage overlooking River Severn.
- Sabrina Le Beauf (born 1958), American actress from the Cosby Show
- Sabrina Dornhoefer (born 1963), American middle distance runner
- Sabrina Ferilli (born 1964), Italian actress
- Sabrina Goleš (born 1965), Croatian tennis player who represented Yugoslavia
- Sabrina Brazzo (born 1968), Italian ballerina
- Sabrina Salerno (born 1968), stage name of Norma Salerno, an Italian Disco singer, actress and model
- Sabrina Lloyd (born 1970), American actress who starred in Sliders and Sports Night
- Sabrina Erdely (born 1971/1972), American magazine reporter known for the defamatory Rolling Stone article "A Rape on Campus"
- Sabrina Sabrok (born 1976), Argentine-Mexican model and host
- Sabrina Richard (born 1977), French weightlifter
- Sabrina Washington (born 1978), British singer of Mis-Teeq fame
- Sabrina Sato (born 1981), Brazilian tv show host and comedian
- Sabrina (Portuguese artist) (born 1982), stage name of Teresa Villa-Lobos, a Portuguese singer
- Sabrina Bryan (born 1984), stage name Reba Hinojos, a Cheetah Girl
- Sabrina Benaim (born 1992), Canadian writer, performance artist, and slam poet
- Sabrina Ionescu (born 1997), American basketball player
- Sabrina Carpenter (born 1999), American teen actress and singer
Anglicization of the Arabic name صابرينا:
- Sabrina Mahfouz (year of birth unknown), British-Egyptian poet (active from 2010).
Pseudonyms
- Sabrina (actress) (1936-2016), stage name (adopted 1955) of Norma Ann Sykes, a British glamour model and actress
- Sabrina Jeffries (active since 1992), pen name of Deborah Gonzales, an American author
Fictional characters
- Sabrina Fairchild in Samuel Taylor's Sabrina Fair (1953), played by Audrey Hepburn in the 1954 adaptation Sabrina and by Julia Ormond in the 1995 remake
- Sabrina Spellman, an Archie Comics character who debuted in 1962 in the October issue of Archie's Mad House
- played by Jane Webb on the animated television series The Archie Comedy Hour (1969) and Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1970)
- played by Melissa Joan Hart on the 1996 television series Sabrina the Teenage Witch
- played by Emily Hart on the animated 2000 television series Sabrina: The Animated Series
- played by Kiernan Shipka on the 2018 Netflix Original series The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
- Sabrina Duncan, played by Kate Jackson on the 1976 television series Charlie's Angels
- Sabrina, the Gym Leader of Saffron City in the Pokémon franchise, first appearing in 1996
- Sabrina Grimm, a main character in The Sisters Grimm series of novels (2005 to 2012) written by Michael Buckley
- Sabrina Costelana Newman, played by Raya Meddine on the 2008 season of the American soap opera The Young and the Restless
- Sabrina Santiago, played by Teresa Castillo premiering in the 2012 season of the American soap opera General Hospital
See also
- Sabrina (disambiguation) for other uses
Notes
- Hanks, Patrick (2003). "Severn". Dictionary of American Family Names. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
[T]opographic name from the river Severn, which flows from Wales through much of western England to the Bristol Channel. The river name is recorded as early as the 2nd century ad in the form Sabrina. This is one of Britain’s most ancient river names; the original meaning is uncertain, but it may have been ‘slow-moving’
, alternatively "boundary", see "Sabrina." Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper. Retrieved 7 January 2013. <Etymonline.com http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=Sabrina>. - Behind the Name
- Dunkling, Leslie; Gosling, William (1983), The Facts on File Dictionary of First Names, New York: Facts on File Publications, p. 247, ISBN 0-87196-274-8
- The Legend of Sabrina
- Tidal Bore Research Society
- Liam Rogers (1999), Sabrina and the River Severn
- United States Social Security Administration