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Clémentine or Clementine is a French feminine form of Clement.The name has been in use in English-speaking countries since the 19th century.In the United States, the name has associations with Oh My Darling, Clementine, a traditional American, tragic but sometimes comic, Western folk ballad [1] and with the citrus fruit named in honor of Clément Rodier, a French missionary who first ...
Clementine Clement or Clément is a French and English given name and surname, a form of the Late Latin name Clemens . People with those given names or surnames include:
"Oh, My Darling Clementine" (Roud 9611, sometimes simply "Clementine") is a traditional American, tragic but sometimes comic, Western folk ballad in trochaic meter usually credited to Percy Montross (or Montrose) (1884), although it is sometimes credited to Barker Bradford.
A clementine (Citrus × clementina) is a tangor, a citrus fruit hybrid between a willowleaf mandarin orange (C. × deliciosa) and a sweet orange (C. × sinensis), [1] [2] [3] named in honor of Clément Rodier, a French missionary who first discovered and propagated the cultivar in Algeria. [4]
Clemente, a name; Clements (disambiguation) Clementine (disambiguation) Klement, a name; Kliment, a name; San Clemente (disambiguation) This page was last edited on ...
Clementina is a feminine given name (derivative of Clement). Notable people with the name include: Patricia Clementina (fl. 590), politically active aristocrat in Byzantine Naples; Clementina Agricole (born 1988), Seychellois weightlifter; Archduchess Clementina of Austria (1798–1881), Austrian archduchess
The meanings of these words do not always correspond to Germanic cognates, and occasionally the specific meaning in the list is unique to English. Those Germanic words listed below with a Frankish source mostly came into English through Anglo-Norman, and so despite ultimately deriving from Proto-Germanic, came to English through a Romance ...
This category is for feminine given names from England (natively, or by historical modification of Biblical, etc., names). See also Category:English-language feminine given names , for all those commonly used in the modern English language , regardless of origin.