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I can tell you this much
D'Andraga must be a surname and not this lady's first name.
This I say because of the "D'" in front of the name. The "D'" probably stands for "Da" meaning "from" in Italien. Like in the name
Leonardo da Vinci.
I may be wrong, but if so this would be the first time I heard of a person whose first name meant "from ..." thus not saying anything about who he/she was who came from "...". That would as far as I see be the same as if Leonardo da Vinci's name had been: D'Vinci, without him having the first name Leonardo .This brings me on to the next part of what I mean to say. If I am right and "D'" stands for "da" then the woman's family whom your husband once knew had in the past had a connection to a place called
Andraga. Who knows perhaps they even still live there.Hmm... now I think of it "D'" might also stand for "Doña" which could be translated into "Lady". That would mean that Andraga did not have to be a place but could be a surname only. Yet, that would still leave us without any first name for the woman in question.-Selwyn
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Another possible source for the D' prefixMany modern and African American names begin with D'/De/Di. In some cases it seems to represent the French, Italian, or Spanish preposition meaning "from", but in other cases it looks to be purely decorative. Sometimes it helps form a variant of a more established name, for example De'borah (Deborah ) and De'lores (Delores ).
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Spanish note"D'" could actually also be the spanish word "de" which however means the same as the Italian "da" i.e. "from"
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I have in my life had a couple of friends that have had a D like the name above as their forst name. D'Andrea was a friend of mine in grade school, and D'Andre was a friend of mine in high school.
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I seeThat I am surprised to hear. What did the "D'" then stand for?
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