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  1. Dinah Laurel Lance is Black Canary, one of the world's foremost martial artists. She is the daughter of Dinah Drake, who used the moniker before her, and a frequent partner of Green Arrow, who over time became her boyfriend, husband, and ex-husband.

  2. Dinah Laurel Lance is the daughter of Dinah Lance and the Starling City police captain Quentin Lance. She is the older sister of Sara, the frequent flame of Oliver Queen, and also operated under the alias Black Canary as a vigilante in Star City, until she was killed by Damien Darhk during a...

  3. Laurel was the oldest daughter of Quentin and Dinah Lance (after whom she was named), the older sister of Sara Lance, the ex-girlfriend/longtime friend of the late Oliver Queen, and longtime friend/wife of Tommy Merlyn.

  4. Professor Dinah Lance is a Greek and medieval history professor at Central City University. She is the mother of the late Laurel Lance and Sara Lance, as well as the ex-wife of Quentin Lance. After Sara's apparent death in the sinking of the Queen's Gambit, Dinah eventually left her husband and surviving daughter.

  5. Black Canary ( Dinah Laurel Lance) is a superheroine appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Lance is one of two women under the alias Black Canary within the DC Universe; she is Dinah Drake 's daughter and successor of the superhero mantle in the post- Crisis narratives.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Black_CanaryBlack Canary - Wikipedia

    The second Black Canary, Dinah Laurel Lance, was created by Dennis O'Neil and Dick Dillin, first appearing in Justice League of America #219 (October, 1983). The character is often depicted as the daughter of the original Dinah Drake, possessing metahuman abilities and being highly skilled in martial arts.

  7. Dinah Laurel Lance (November 15, 1985 – April 6, 2016) is the name of several fictional characters in The CW's Arrowverse franchise based on the DC Comics character of the same name, created by writer-artist team of Robert Kanigher and Carmine Infantino, and adapted by Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim and Andrew Kreisberg for Arrow in 2012.