Sandra

Etymology
A short form of Alexandra and, less often, of Cassandra.

Proper noun

 * ., diminutive of Alexandra,
 * 1) * 1971 Hugh Hood, The Fruit Man, the Meat Man & the Manager: Stories, Oberon Press 1971, page 23:
 * "Sandra, that's no name for anybody; that was a name for movie stars around 1948. Nobody's used it since. But the fact is, her name really is Sandra. - - - In the mills towns like Torrington and Bristol, the Italians might very well call a girl Sandra for real. Straight. It's just short for Alessandra. Alexandra. So she has numerous choices - she can be Sandy, a clean-cut WASP, or she can be Renaissance Alessandra, or movie-star Sandra, or old-fashioned Edwardian Alexandra, all on the one name."

Anagrams

 * NARSAD

Proper noun

 * , cognate to English Sandra.

Proper noun

 * , short for Alexandra:.

Proper noun

 * , short for Aleksandra:.

Proper noun

 * , short form of Alexandra:.

Related terms

 * Sandrine

Etymology
From Sandra:, reinforced by the English name Sandra.

Proper noun

 * , short form of Alessandra:.

Etymology
First recorded as a given name of Latvians in 1937. From Aleksandra:.

Related terms

 * Sanda

Etymology
Short form of Alexandra:. First used as a given name in the end of the 19th century.

Etymology
From the short form of Alessandra. Compare Spanish Alejandra:.

Etymology
A short form of Alexandra:. First recorded as a given name in Sweden in 1871.

Proper noun


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