Isabella

Etymology
Latinate and Italian form of. The grape cultivar is popularly thought to have been discovered by a Mrs Isabella Gibbs of South Carolina in 1816.

Proper noun

 * : Act I, Scene V:
 * Can you so stead me,
 * As bring me to the sight of Isabella,
 * A novice of this place, and the fair sister
 * To her unhappy brother Claudio?
 * 1) * 1857 Mary Anne Everett Green, Lives of the Princesses of England, Vol. 3, page 2 ("Elizabeth, eighth daughter of Edward I"):
 * A contemporary, and usually very accurate chronicler, Bartholomew of Norwich, tells us that the queen called her infant by the barbarous name of Walkiniana; others again call her Isabella; but, in the wardrobe accounts, and all other state records, she is invariably designated Elizabeth.
 * A contemporary, and usually very accurate chronicler, Bartholomew of Norwich, tells us that the queen called her infant by the barbarous name of Walkiniana; others again call her Isabella; but, in the wardrobe accounts, and all other state records, she is invariably designated Elizabeth.

Usage notes

 * Popular in England in the 19th century, and again in all English-speaking countries in the 2000s.

Noun



 * 1)  A grape cultivar  popular in the former USSR derived from the grape species.

Translations

 * Georgian: ადესა
 * Laz: ადესა
 * Mingrelian: ადესა
 * Turkish: adesa

Etymology
From in the Middle Ages.

Proper noun

 * 1)  popular in the 2000s

Related terms

 * and its variants
 * and its variants

Etymology
Borrowed from and.

Usage notes
Matronymics
 * son of Isabella: Isabelluson
 * daughter of Isabella: Isabelludóttir

Etymology
From, recorded since the end of 19th century.

Etymology
From.

Related terms

 * and its variants
 * and its variants
 * and its variants
 * and its variants

Etymology
From (Old).

Etymology
From. First recorded in Norway in the 14th century.

Proper noun

 * 1)  popular in the 2000s

Related terms

 * and its variants
 * and its variants
 * and its variants

Etymology
From. First recorded as a Swedish given name in 1564.

Proper noun

 * 1)  popular in the 2000s

Related terms

 * and its variants
 * and its variants
 * and its variants
 * and its variants
 * and its variants