margarita
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L323640 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
name
Etymology: Borrowed from the Latin and Spanish Margarita (“Margaret”).
- A female given name from Ancient Greek.
““I didn’t think you loved me so much as this, my Margarita!” he said, in a broken voice. She did not answer, but she clung to him as a child clings to its mother, and the end was, they remained in town together. It seemed as though Fate interposed to prevent the two Margaritas meeting again.”
noun
Etymology: Etymology tree Proto-Indo-Iranian *mr̥gás Proto-Iranian *mr̥gáhder. Proto-Iranian *mŕ̥ga-ahri-ita-der.? Ancient Greek μαργᾰρῑ́της (margărī́tēs)der. Latin margarītader. Spanish margaritabor. English Margarita Borrowed from Spanish margarita.
- Alternative letter-case form of margarita.
“Anyway, hope you don’t get this coz you’re off somewhere cool, sipping Margarita and getting over yourself.”
“You: Gray hair, 50-ish, dark red button-up shirt, black pants, sipping Margarita alone at table.”