Plus there are more male names that end with "ine" though I can't think of any.A well-known example would be
Valentine. I think perhaps the -ine ending in English was originally masculine (when the name was derived from Latin), but some now might consider it feminine because of French imports like
Christine,
Justine,
Jacqueline, etc. But feminine Latin names imported to English from Latin were generally left unchanged e.g.
Claudia,
Victoria,
Martina, with the exception of maybe
Mary, so
Augustine wasn't originally a feminine name (in English), that would be
Augustina. But French is of course different. The -us of the Latin
Augustinus was removed and changed to
Augustin, and the for the feminine form
Augustina, the -a was changed to an -e. You'll see that with many French names that derive from Latin, e.g
Germain and
Germaine.
As for names being considered masculine or feminine, it really does depend on where you're from. For example, in Italy
Andrea is a masculine name, their form of
Andrew. I'm from the
UK, so I've only ever seen the saints' names spelt
Valentine,
Augustine, etc. The former
King of Greece,
Konstantinos, was always referred to as
Constantine in English. Sorry if my original reply seemed a little rambling and incoherent because I was writing it at one o'clock last night.
This message was edited 7/22/2012, 5:38 AM