Audrina means noble strength — from the Old English ealdor (elder/noble). Audrina Patridge starred in The Hills. V.C. Andrews' My Sweet Audrina is one of the most haunting Gothic novels. The -ina ending gives Italian-feminine elaboration to the Anglo-Saxon root. Three syllables of Old-English nobility, Gothic-novel mystery, and the Hills-level reality.
Old English ealdor (noble)→Audrey→-ina elaboration Audrina
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ModernAmerican / InventedVariant roots
Audrina comes from Old English meaning noble strength with an -ina Italian ending. V.C. Andrews' My Sweet Audrina is one of the most haunting Gothic novels. Audrina Patridge starred in The Hills.
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First recorded
Earliest known use: V.C. Andrews' My Sweet Audrina (1982); The Hills (2006).
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Today
Audrina remains a beloved choice, ranking #1341 in the US. 8,549 babies have been named Audrina since 1983.
◈ Sources: Behind the Name, SSA data
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How popular is Audrina?
2011peak year
Today, Audrina is rarely chosen — ranked well outside the top 1,000 (around #1341), with only about 213 babies given the name per year. But it wasn't always this way. At its peak in 2011, 985 babies were given the name (ranked #320 nationally). Its strongest stretch was the 2010s. Audrina has been declining in recent years. In all, around 8,549 babies have been registered as Audrina since 1880.
Year-by-year registrations1880–2024 · U.S. Social Security data
Audrina's Life Path 7 is the seeker's number — Gothic-seeking. People named Audrina tend to be elegant, mysterious, and gifted at being both noble and hauntingly sweet.
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