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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rubin

Rubin \Ru"bin\, n. [Cf. LL. rubinus, It. rubino. See Ruby.] A ruby. [Obs.]
--Spenser.

Wiktionary
rubin

n. (context obsolete English) A ruby.

Wikipedia
Rubin

Rubin or Rubins is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:

Surname:

  • Shabbatai HaKohen
  • Alan Rubin, American musician
  • Andrejs Rubins (b. 1978), Latvian footballer
  • Andy Rubin, Senior Vice President of Mobile at Google
  • Arthur Rubin (b. 1956), American mathematician
  • Avi Rubin, Expert on electronic voting security
  • Barbara Rubin (1945–1980), American filmmaker and performance artist
  • Benjamin Rubin (1917–2010), American microbiologist
  • Chanda Rubin (b. 1976), American tennis player
  • Charles T. Rubin, political science professor
  • Daphne Rubin-Vega (b. 1969), American dance music singer and actress
  • Dave Rubin (b. 1976), American comedian, talk show host and television personality
  • Donald Rubin, Professor of Statistics
  • Eduard Rubin, Swiss Army, inventor of the first jacketed rifle bullets (1882) and co-inventor of the Schmidt–Rubin rifle
  • Edgar John Rubin (1886–1951)
  • Gayle Rubin (b. 1949), American cultural anthropologist
  • Gerald M. Rubin, American geneticist
  • Harold Rubin, South African and Israeli artist and jazz clarinettist
  • Ian Rubin, Ukraine-born Australian rugby league footballer
  • Idan Rubin, Israeli football (soccer) player
  • Ira Rubin (c. 1930–2013), American bridge player
  • Irv Rubin (1946–2002), Canadian-born Kahanist
  • Isaak Illich Rubin (1886–1937), Russian economist and Marxist theorist.
  • James Rubin (b. 1960), U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, 1997–2000
  • James H. Rubin, art historian, New York City
  • Jay Rubin
  • Jennifer Rubin (actress), American actress
  • Jennifer Rubin (journalist), blogger at the Washington Post
  • Jerry Rubin, American political activist
  • Karl Rubin, American mathematician
  • Louis D. Rubin, Jr. (1923–2013), Southern Literature scholar and publisher.
  • Marcel Rubin, composer
  • Michael Rubin, American scholar and commentator on Middle Eastern history and politics
  • Miri Rubin, British medievalist
  • Noah Rubin (b. 1996), American tennis player
  • Reuven Rubin (1893–1974), Israeli painter
  • Richard Rubin (TV personality), American TV personality
  • Rick Rubin, American record producer and record label owner
  • Ron Rubin (disambiguation)
  • Robert Rubin (b. 1938), U.S. Treasury Secretary, 1995–1999
  • Samuel M. Rubin "Sam the Popcorn Man" (1918–2004), American entrepreneur credited with the mass introduction of popcorn machines to cinemas
  • Shelley Rubin, chairman and CEO of the Jewish Defense League
  • Theodore Isaac Rubin (b. 1923), American psychiatrist and author
  • Tibor Rubin
  • Uri Rubin, professor of Arabic and Islamic literature at Tel Aviv University
  • Vera Rubin (b. 1928), American astronomer
  • Yoram Rubin

Given name:

  • Rubin Carter, nicknamed The Hurricane, boxer who was imprisoned and later absolved
  • Rubin Goldmark
  • Rubin Kantorovich
  • Rubin Patiția
Rubin (disambiguation)

Rubin is both a surname and a given name.

Rubin may also refer to:

Rubin (company)

Rubin (, full legal name: Akcionarsko društvo Rubin za proizvodjnu i promet alkoholnih i bezalkoholnih pića Kruševac) is Serbian alcoholic beverages company headquartered in Kruševac, and established in 1955.

Located in a wine region of West Morava, it produces chiefly grapes, wine and alcoholic drinks. Its most renowned product is Rubinov Vinjak, type of brandy.

Usage examples of "rubin".

One of my clearest memories of that wretched weekend is the sight of Jerry Rubin standing forlornly on the steps of a marble building near the Capitol, watching a gang fight at the base of a flagpole.

Gorodin a request for transfer, just as soon as that Special status is voted for Rubin, before the appropriations vote for the Hope Station project.

Gertrude Blanck and Rubin Blanck, for example, pioneers in psychoanalytic developmental psychology, have persuasively argued that the aggressive drive is the drive to differentiation, and Eros is the drive to integration, and disruption of either one results in serious pathology (we will return to this in chap.

If the Centrists try anything with Rubin, Harogo can fry them, no question.

One of the bully boys who'd brought him in to Benjamin Rubin tapped him on the shoulder.

The choice of a successor was easy: Bob Rubin had built the National Economic Council into the most important innovation in White House decision making in decades, was respected on Wall Street, and wanted the economy to work for all Americans.

Urbain Street boys into the camp free each season, helping out Rubin with his mortgage after the fire there, paying a head-shrinker fortunes to make a man out of Irwin Shubert, his enemy of old ("Throwing good money after bad," people said), building a special house for the epileptic who had been hurt working for him in those bygone days of his struggles, and giving so many benefit nights for worthy causes.

My own experience with Rubin turned out to be just about par for the course.

I admit you're not an animated phonograph needle like Rubin but you haven't said a word all dinner, damn it.

All I knew about Rubin before I called was that several days earlier he had thrown Washington Post correspondent David Broder out of his office for asking too many questions - less than twenty-four hours before Broder appeared on Rubin's TV screen as one of the three interrogators on the first Humphrey/McGovern debate.