Sheila
See also: sheila
English
Alternative forms
Proper noun
Sheila
- A female given name.
- 1874 William Black, A Princess of Thule, Adamant Media Corporation, →ISBN, page 295
- Were English girls not good enough for him that he must needs come up and take away Sheila Mackenzie, and keep her there in the South.
- 1933 Eleanor Farjeon, Over the Garden Wall,Faber and Faber 1933, page 91 ("Girls' Names")
- What lovely names for girls there are! / There's Stella like the Evening Star, / And Sylvia like a rustling tree, / And Lola like a melody, / And Flora like a flowery morn, / And Sheila like a field of corn,
- 2008 Helen Walsh, Once Upon a Time in England, →ISBN, page 48-49
- He shortened her name to Sheila which, in spite of its primness, she seemed to love. - - - For Susheela - Sheila, as she was now known - this creeping daylight signalled the start, not the end of sleep.
- 1874 William Black, A Princess of Thule, Adamant Media Corporation, →ISBN, page 295
Usage notes
Originally used in Ireland; popular in the UK from the 1920s to the 1950s.
Translations
Usage notes
More commonly spelled Sheela, but this spelling is sometimes found under the influence of the unrelated name of Irish origin.
Cebuano
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