What does austen mean?

Definitions for austen
ˈɔ stənausten

This dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word austen.

Princeton's WordNet

  1. Austen, Jane Austennoun

    English novelist noted for her insightful portrayals of middle-class families (1775-1817)

Wiktionary

  1. Austennoun

    ; a variant of Austin.

  2. Austennoun

    Jane Austen, English novelist.

Wikipedia

  1. austen

    Austen is surname deriving from the Latin Augustine, and first used around the 13th century.

ChatGPT

  1. austen

    Austen is commonly used as a reference to Jane Austen, a renowned English novelist known for her literary works like "Pride and Prejudice," "Sense and Sensibility," and "Emma" all written during the 18th century. Her work offers a critique of the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century, and her plots often explore the dependence of women on marriage in the pursuit of favourable social standing and economic security. This term, however, can also be a given name for both males and females.

Surnames Frequency by Census Records

  1. AUSTEN

    According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Austen is ranked #29793 in terms of the most common surnames in America.

    The Austen surname appeared 789 times in the 2010 census and if you were to sample 100,000 people in the United States, approximately 0 would have the surname Austen.

    88.8% or 701 total occurrences were White.
    3.8% or 30 total occurrences were Black.
    2.6% or 21 total occurrences were of two or more races.
    2.4% or 19 total occurrences were of Hispanic origin.

Matched Categories

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Numerology

  1. Chaldean Numerology

    The numerical value of austen in Chaldean Numerology is: 6

  2. Pythagorean Numerology

    The numerical value of austen in Pythagorean Numerology is: 8

Examples of austen in a Sentence

  1. Sheryl Craig:

    I assume it would be impossible to prove the cause of death without examining Jane Austen body, and Jane Austen body's extremely unlikely to happen. Jane Austen's buried in the floor of Winchester Cathedral.

  2. Janine Barchas:

    There have been a number of medical historians in the past, since the mid-1960s, who have diagnosed Jane Austen in absentia and who have used new medical knowledge as it has become available to glance back at the death of Jane Austen, who did die prematurely.

  3. Joel Kim Booster:

    There's a universality to how Jane Austen depicts class struggles, especially in a place like Fire Island, where suddenly there are no straight people around to oppress us and we have to find ways to oppress one another, we recreate the artificial class systems and other hierarchies that exist in the rest of the world but are just magnified and felt so much more viscerally in a place where it's only gay people.

  4. Shauna Lynch:

    Jane Austen was writing letters, in Jane Austen usual quite tiny handwriting, up to May 1817, two months before Jane Austen death. ... For this reason it seems unlikely that Jane Austen was as close to blind as the optometrist quoted on the British Library blog site suggests.

  5. William Galperin:

    What( Jane Austen) is trying to suggest on the largest scale is that what goes on in the everyday basis of all of our lives is filled with all kinds of implications, it doesn't have to involve big things like fights and power struggles on a grand sort of geopolitical level. Ordinary, everyday life is filled with all kinds of complexities. And the closer the films come to representing that, the better they are.

Popularity rank by frequency of use

austen#10000#21382#100000

Translations for austen

From our Multilingual Translation Dictionary

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"austen." Definitions.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 25 Apr. 2024. <https://www.definitions.net/definition/austen>.

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