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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Ernestine

fem. form of Ernest. As an adjective, in German history, "pertaining to the elder branch of the Saxon house," who descend from Ernest, Elector of Saxony 15c.

Wikipedia
Ernestine

Ernestine is a female given name. It can refer to:

Usage examples of "ernestine".

When she returned to the front of the house, only Ernestine was present.

Before Tess could pursue the subject, Ernestine pushed back her chair.

As she lay in the narrow bed in her borrowed white nightdress, she wished she could make sense of the story Ernestine had told her.

As they approached the house, ss spotted Ernestine standing on the porch.

As they approached the house, Tess could see Ernestine on the front porch looking anxiously down the road It was a relief to be able to focus her attention on the old woman.

Biscayne Boulevard and Northeast Eighth Street, Biscayne and Eleventh, East Flagler and Third Avenue they questioned a few daytime prostitutes, asking about Ernestine and Flame.

Her Friend--But apropos of this, you know that Ernestine has not forgiven him his pleasantry of the other evening.

Within twenty-four hours, forensics would have eliminated anything from Ernestine and her church group, the garage employees, the victims.

Lady Ernestine Pigeoncote, his mother, moved in circles which were entirely beyond their compass or ambitions, and the son would probably one day be an Ambassador.

Mary Wollstonecraft, Frances Wright, Ernestine Rose, George Sand, Sarah and Angelina Grimke, and Margaret Fuller, its formal birthday is July 19, 1848, at Seneca Falls, New York.

These bore a printed return address on the back: Miss Ernestine Sage Rocky Fields Farm Bernardsville, N.

She had been welcomed home the previous afternoon after a leisurely drive from Gap by old Ernestine, the maid who had been in service at the chateau since Alfred's father's day, and the gardener, Louison, a former peasant boy who had married Ernestine when she was still an under housemaid.

The names of Emma Eames, Amelita Galli-Curci, Geraldine Farrar, Louise Homer, Luisa Tetrazzini and Ernestine Schumann-Heink were used very freely, and startling comparisons drawn, without much regard for whether these ladies had been sopranos or contraltos.