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Wiktionary
audie

Etymology 1 n. (given name male from=Irish). Etymology 2

n. (given name female diminutive=Audrey).

Wikipedia
Audie

Audie is a given name. Notable people with the name include:

  • Audie Bock (born 1946), American film scholar and politician who served in the California State Assembly from 1999 to 2000
  • Audie Cole (born 1989), American National Football League player
  • Audie Cornish, reporter with NPR's "National Desk" program
  • Audie Desbrow (born 1957), American musician and drummer, with the American blues-based hard rock band Great White
  • Audie England (born 1967), American actress and professional photographer
  • Audie Murphy (1925–1971), American soldier in World War II, recipient of the Medal of Honor, and movie star
  • Audie Norris (born 1960), American retired National Basketball Association player
  • Audie Pitre (1970–1997), American bass guitarist

Usage examples of "audie".

Brandishing lengths of thick pipe, they held Audie pinioned between them.

Raney had an arm around her, watching with troubled eyes as Audie sipped from a steaming mug of coffee which she held in two trembling hands.

Kate placed her chair opposite Audie and sat down, but addressed Maggie.

Raney said, and reached to Audie to tenderly brush strands of gray-threaded dark hair at her temple.

But these three dopers had been intent on taking Audie with them, and for obvious purposes.

Raney and Audie, an arm around each other, walked toward the front door.

That Audie offered to go with them and you women at the bar interfered and I, prejudiced woman cop that I am, wronged them.

Kate had foretold: Audie had agreed to accompany them, and first the women and then Kate had interfered.

Marlowe was lying on his bed watching Audie Murphy in Bullet for a Badman and feeling increasingly like a vegetable when the talking head interrupted the movie.

One of the main characters-the nice kid from a Midwestern town, played by somebody like Audie Murphy-is terrified of battle.

S-J would have scoffed at George, called him a 'queer bastard' or a 'golden oldie,' but Bobby found him a welcome change from heroes like Randolph Scott, Richard Carlson, and the inevitable Audie Murphy.

Drunk one night in the Great Hearth and bickering with his wife, Audie had reached for a jug of ale on the mantel but had seized upon a pitcher of lamp oil instead.