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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Eunice

fem. proper name, from Latinized form of Greek Eunike, literally "victorious," from eu "good, well" (see eu-) + nike "victory" (see Nike).

Gazetteer
Eunice, NM -- U.S. city in New Mexico
Population (2000): 2562
Housing Units (2000): 1110
Land area (2000): 2.919525 sq. miles (7.561534 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.008505 sq. miles (0.022028 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 2.928030 sq. miles (7.583562 sq. km)
FIPS code: 25450
Located within: New Mexico (NM), FIPS 35
Location: 32.440005 N, 103.162514 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 88231
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Eunice, NM
Eunice
Eunice, LA -- U.S. city in Louisiana
Population (2000): 11499
Housing Units (2000): 4675
Land area (2000): 4.675153 sq. miles (12.108590 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 4.675153 sq. miles (12.108590 sq. km)
FIPS code: 24565
Located within: Louisiana (LA), FIPS 22
Location: 30.493595 N, 92.416927 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 70535
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Eunice, LA
Eunice
Wikipedia
Eunice

Eunice is a feminine given name, from the Greek Εὐνίκη, Euníkē, from "eu", good, and "níkē", victory.

Eunice (genus)

Eunice is a genus in the polychaete family Eunicidae. Individuals grow to a length of between . Their bodies have multiple segments. They have two eyes and five tentacles. They have well-developed sense organs and relatively large brains. Their color is dark purple-brown to red-brown with a white ring at the fourth segment. They are found in oceans and seas around the world. They have an evertible proboscis with distinctive mouthparts, some of which comprise two rows of maxilliary plates in a radula-like fashion.

Eunice (Bosporan queen)

Eunice (, flourished 1st century, died after 69) was the wife of the Roman Client King, Cotys I and through her marriage was a Roman Client Queen of the Bosporan Kingdom.

Eunice was a Greek noblewoman of obscure origins. At an unknown date in the reign of Cotys I, 45-63, he married Eunice as his Queen. Cotys I was a monarch of Greek, Iranian and Roman ancestry. He was the second son born to the Bosporan Roman Client Monarchs Aspurgus and Gepaepyris, while his eldest brother was the former Bosporan King Mithridates.

Eunice bore Cotys I, a son and his successor Rhescuporis I. The name Rhescuporis, is a name of Thracian origin and is a name that appears in the family of her mother-in-law.

She is not mentioned in ancient Roman historical sources. Eunice is only known through surviving inscriptions and numismatic evidence. In the year 1910, a Greek inscription was found on a marble plate in the wall of a house in Anapa, Russia. Anapa was the ancient Greek city of Gorgippia. In the upper left corner of the marble plate appeared the below inscription. This inscription is dated from the reign of her son Rhescuporis I (68-90) (Corpus Regni Inscriptionum Bospor CIRB 1118):

[Τὸ]ν ἐκ προγόνων βα[σιλέων βασιλέα μέγαν]Τιβέριου Ίούλιου Ῥη[σκούποριν βασιλέως Κότυ]oς καὶ βασιλίσσης Eὐν[είκης]… The descendant of the Kings, great King Tiberius Julius Rhescuporis, son of King Cotys and of Queen Eunice

Eunice’s name has also appear in surviving bronze coinage from the Bosporan Kingdom. On coins on one side appears the Greek legend, KA-ΠE appears with a temple with five steps. On the other side of coins, appears with an enclosing wreath with the Greek abbreviations BAK, BAEY, BAEIY and with the trade denomination . KA-ΠE can be read as KAΠE[τολιών]. BAK is the royal abbreviations of Cotys I in Greek: BA[σιλεύς] K[ότυος], of King Cotys, while BAEY and BAEIY are the royal abbreviations for Eunice in Greek: BA[σιλεία] E[ὐνείκη], of Queen Eunice. No other coins from the Bosporan bear these abbreviations. These coins can be dated from the reigns of Coyts I and Rhescuporis I.

These coins reveal the political situation of the Bosporan Kingdom in the mid-1st century. In 63 for unknown reasons, the Roman Emperor Nero disposed Cotys I from his throne and his fate afterwards is unknown. The Bosporan Kingdom was incorporated as a part of the Roman Province of Moesia Inferior from 63-68. Perhaps Nero wanted to minimise the role, power and influence of local client rulers and desired the Bosporan to be completely governed by the Roman state.

In June 68, Nero had died and Galba succeeded as Roman Emperor. The coinage clearly portrays the successful attempt of Rhescuporis I to restore the Bosporan Kingdom as a semi-independent Roman Client Kingdom. Cotys I had died by that time, Rhescuporis I had his throne and his kingdom restored to him.

The surviving coinage and inscriptions reveal clues about Eunice. Eunice appears to have been a religious monarch, who seems to be a woman of strong, virtuous character. She helped her son in restoration of the Bosporan Kingdom and acting as a regent at least in the first year of her son’s rule. Eunice proved to be a capable ruling monarch in the Bosporan flourishing again.

Eunice (software)

Eunice was a Unix-like working environment for VAX computers running DEC's VAX/VMS, based on the BSD version of Unix. It was originally developed ca. 1981 by David Kashtan at SRI and later maintained and marketed by The Wollongong Group.

Eunice was one of several Unix compatibility packages developed during the 1980s. It provided VMS binary versions Unix tools, a VMS object library emulating of the Unix API (including the system call interface) and an assembler that produced VMS binaries. Eunice was criticized for its performance problems and not quite complete Unix compatibility.

Eunice (film)

Eunice is a 1982 American made-for-television comedy-drama film starring Carol Burnett, Harvey Korman, Vicki Lawrence, Ken Berry and Betty White which is based on characters of a recurring series of comedy sketches called " The Family" featured on The Carol Burnett Show (1974–78) and Carol Burnett & Company (1979). The film was broadcast on March 15, 1982 as "A CBS Special Presentation" and served as a precursor to the spin-off television sitcom Mama's Family.

Eunice (Bible)

According to the New Testament, Eunice was the mother of Saint Timothy. She is mentioned only in 2 Timothy 1:5, which relates Paul saying to Timothy, "I am reminded of your sincere faith, a faith that dwelt first in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice and now, I am sure, dwells in you as well." ( ESV)

Many commentators have also connected Eunice to 2 Tim. 3:15, where Timothy is reminded "how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings" ( ESV). Albert Barnes, for example, says, "The mother of Timothy was a pious Hebrewess, and regarded it as one of the duties of her religion to train her son in the careful knowledge of the word of God."

Usage examples of "eunice".

It was unfortunate for Eunice Parchman, and for them, that the people who employed her and in whose home she lived for nine months were peculiarly literate.

Had they been a family of philistines, they might be alive today and Eunice free in her mysterious dark freedom of sensation and instinct and blank absence of the printed word.

When Eunice Parchman was engaged as their housekeeper George was fifty-seven and Jacqueline forty-two.

Before Eunice came, and left desolation behind her, Lowfield Hall was not like this.

But in those few seconds she spent with Eunice Parchman she felt a violent antipathy to her.

As soon as Eunice Parchman had sat down she undid the top button of her raincoat to disclose the polo neck of a lighter blue-ribbed jumper.

And instead of examining the candidate, instead of attempting to find out if this woman were suitable to work in her house, if she would suit the Coverdales, she began persuading Eunice Parchman that they would suit her.

At this point Jacqueline should have asked why Eunice was leaving her present situation, or at least something about her present situation.

If Jacqueline had had a better knowledge of Greater London, she would have realized that Eunice Parchman had already told her a lie, or at least acquiesced in a misapprehension.

Before she made the phone call Jacqueline, who had an active imagination, had formed a picture in her mind of the kind of household in which Eunice Parchman worked and the kind of woman who employed her.

The Coverdales had speculated about Eunice Parchman as to her work potential and her attitude, respectful or otherwise, towards themselves.

At that stage Eunice was little more than a machine to them, and the satisfactory working of that machine depended on its being suitably oiled and its having no objection to stairs.

Parchman, at fifty, was confined to a wheelchair, and Eunice gave up her job to look after her and run the house.

Parchman died when Eunice was thirty-seven, and her widower immediately took over as resident invalid.

Like all her close acquaintances, Annie suspected Eunice was illiterate or semi-literate, but no one could ever be quite sure.