Sabrina
Appearance
Look up Sabrina in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Sabrina may refer to:
- Sabrina (given name), a feminine given name, including a list of persons and fictional characters with the name
People
[edit]- Sabrina (musician) (born 2002), Afrobeats singer from Cameroon
- Sabrina (actress), stage name of Norma Ann Sykes (1936–2016), a British glamour model and actress
- Sabrina (Filipino singer) (born 1989)
- Sabrina (Greek singer) (born 1969)
- Sabrina Carpenter (born 1999), American singer and actress
- Sabrina (Portuguese singer) (born 1982)
- Sabrina Salerno (born 1968), Italian singer also mononymously known as Sabrina
Film and television
[edit]- Sabrina (1954 film), starring Humphrey Bogart, Audrey Hepburn, and William Holden
- Sabrina (1995 film), a remake starring Harrison Ford, Julia Ormond, and Greg Kinnear
- Sabrina (2018 film), an Indonesian horror film
- Several media properties featuring Sabrina the Teenage Witch
- Sabrina (Mexican TV series), a Mexican show on the Telehit network, circa 2005
- Sabrina (Bangladeshi TV series), a streaming series
Music
[edit]- Sabrina (album), an album by Sabrina
- "Sabrina", a song by Einstürzende Neubauten
- "Sabrina", a song from Heartbeat of the Earth by Inkubus Sukkubus
Places
[edit]- Sabrina Coast, a part of the coast of Antarctica
- Sabrina Ridge, Antarctica
- Sabrina Island, off Antarctica
- Sabrina Island (Azores), a temporary island between June and July 1811
- Sabrina Way, a footpath and bridleway in England
- River Severn or Sabrina, a river in Great Britain
- Lake Sabrina, California, United States
Ships
[edit]- HMS Sabrina, the name of four ships of the Royal Navy
- MSC Sabrina, a container ship
- SS Sabrina or SS Empire Buckler, a Liberian cargo ship
Other uses
[edit]- Sabrina (comics), a 2018 graphic novel by Nick Drnaso
- 2264 Sabrina, an asteroid
- Statue of Sabrina, an 1857 statue owned by Amherst College
- Senova D20, a 2012–present Chinese subcompact car, sold in Iran as the BAIC Sabrina
- Triumph Sabrina engine, an automotive engine developed by Standard-Triumph in the late 1950s.