1844–1925, queen consort of Edward VII of England.
Classical Mythology. Cassandra (def. 1).
a female given name: derived from Alexander.
Words nearby Alexandra
Alexander the Great, Alexander V, Alexander VI, Alexander VII, Alexander VIII, Alexandra, Alexandra Feodorovna, Alexandretta, Alexandria, Alexandrian, Alexandrina
Edward and Alexandra were the most permissive royal parents.
Kate and William’s Royal Family Values|Tom Sykes|September 22, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The most important thing is to make sure Alexandra is ready.
Femen’s Abusive Patriarch, Victor Svyatski, Exposed in 'Ukraine Is Not a Brothel’|Marlow Stern|March 12, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Alexandra Saitova of Team Russia is 21, while her Skip Anna Sidorova is 23.
Curling: Your New Olympic Addiction, Explained|Brett Singer|February 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
In one clip, Vogue UK editor Alexandra Shulman talks about first putting Beckham on the cover of the magazine.
Barneys New York Campaign Stars Transgender Models; Burberry Vows to Eliminate Toxins From Clothing|The Fashion Beast Team|January 30, 2014|DAILY BEAST
As Alexandra Richie notes, it is one from which Poland “will never truly recover”.
While the World Watched: The 1944 Warsaw Uprising|Ilana Bet-El|December 29, 2013|DAILY BEAST
That she was beautiful, impulsive, barely two years older than Emil, these facts had had no weight with Alexandra.
O Pioneers!|Willa Cather
How nice your dress smells, Alexandra; you put rosemary leaves in your chest, like I told you.
O Pioneers!|Willa Cather
Gussie sighed the sigh of innocence, a sigh which the young men with whom she larked about in Alexandra Gardens never heard.
A Lost Cause|Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull
By all the devils—now listen—they say that you are Alexandra Petrovnas lover, and that—how horrible!
The Duel|A. I. Kuprin
The villa of Hvidre was acquired by Queen Alexandra in 1907.
1844–1925, queen consort of Edward VII of Great Britain and Ireland
1872–1918, the wife of Nicholas II of Russia; her misrule while Nicholas was supreme commander of the Russian forces during World War I precipitated the Russian Revolution