Proper noun
Berenice
A female given name from Ancient Greek, notably of ancient queens of Egypt.
Cited by Edgar Allan Poe Poe's short story "Berenice" starts with a motto, the first half of a poem, by Ibn Zaiat: Dicebant mihi sodales si sepulchrum amicae visitarem, curas meas aliquantulum fore levatas. Source: Internet
Astronomical chart showing Bootes the Ploughman holding a spear, a sickle, and two dogs, Asterion and Chara, on a leash, also showing a quadrant, and the hair of Berenice forming the constellations. Source: Internet
Berenice Núñez Constant, VP of Government Relations at Altamed, says their clinics will never turn down services to patients. Source: Internet
New York's Radio Row in 1936, with the Cortlandt Street station in the background, as seen in a photograph by Berenice Abbott A crowd gathers near an electronics shop at Greenwich and Dey streets after John F. Kennedy 's assassination in 1963. Source: Internet
Berenice Ramirez Campos, 20, is a DACA recipient and UT-Austin student studying public health. Source: Internet
Isabel Albino, Mai Kurihara, Lorena Velazquez and Berenice Maldonado study at Chico State on Thursday. Source: Internet