Nadine

"Variant of Nadia. Caller, announcer; tender, delicate"

♀ Féminin · French
international elegant hopeful variant

📖 À propos Nadine

Nadine est la forme française de Nadia, elle-même diminutif de Nadezhda — le russe pour ‘espérance’, l’une des trois vertus suprêmes du christianisme orthodoxe ; le prénom a atteint le top 10 en Allemagne tout au long des années 1980 et est immortalisé par la lauréate du Nobel Nadine Gordimer, qui a décrit l’apartheid sud-africain avec une clarté morale implacable.

📍 Détails

  • OrigineFrench
  • Genre♀ Féminin
  • SignificationVariant of Nadia. Caller, announcer; tender, delicate

🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés

⭐ Personnes Célèbres

  • Nadine Gordimer — South African novelist and political activist (1923–2014), winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991; a lifelong opponent of apartheid and a member of the African National Congress, her fiction — including The Conservationist (1974, Booker Prize) and July's People (1981) — is among the most morally searching of the 20th century; she was awarded the Order of Lenin and the Booker Prize and refused numerous honours from the apartheid government.
  • Nadine Labaki — Lebanese actress and film director (born 1974), known for her socially committed films set in contemporary Lebanon; her film Capernaum (2018) — about a child suing his parents for giving him life — won the Jury Prize at Cannes and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film; she is regarded as one of the most important Arab filmmakers of her generation.
  • Nadine Coyle — Irish singer and songwriter (born 1985), best known as a member of the British-Irish pop group Girls Aloud (2002–2013), one of the most successful girl groups in UK chart history with 20 consecutive top-10 singles; known for her powerful soprano voice and her Northern Irish origins, she has also pursued a solo career.
  • Nadezhda (Hope) — the root virtue — In Eastern Orthodox Christian tradition, Nadezhda (Hope) is one of the three supreme theological virtues alongside Vera (Faith) and Lyubov (Love/Charity); all three are also given names, and in Orthodox hagiography Saints Vera, Nadezhda, and Lyubov are three sister martyrs venerated on September 17; the name Nadine thus carries the heritage of Christian hope as a living given name.