GIRLS
Adelma - Anglo-Saxon, from the name Ealdhelm, from "eald" meaning "old" and "helm" meaning "helmet".
BOYS
Cranmer
Needham
Robert Frost's poem "A Cliff Dwelling" reminds me of the people who must have lived here "Oh years ago--ten thousand years" and enjoyed the beauty and safety of a cliff. A place "to rest from his besetting fears". Welcome to mine.
In 2014 I featured a series of blog posts introducing you to 2,014 names. For the most part they were names that were brand new to me as well. Some names may be more familiar but I found the meaning or origin or some other aspect of the name made it worthy of inclusion here. You may love some of the names, you may hate some, but hopefully you enjoy learning about all of them.
Find names by origin
Find Names By Origin
Abenaki African-Twi Akkadian Albanian Algonquian American Amorite Anglo-Saxon Arabic Aragonese Aramaic Araucan Armenian Assyrian Asturian Avestan Azeri Babylonian Basque Belarusian Benin Bosnian Brazilian Portuguese Breton Bulgarian Catalan Celtic Chechen Chinese Coptic Cornish Croatian Czech Dacian Dakota Sioux Danish Dutch Egyptian English Eskimo Estonian Faroese Finnish Flemish Frankish French Frisian Gaelic Galician Gaulish German Gothic Greek Hawaiian Hebrew Hittite Hungarian Hurrian Igbo Indonesian Iranian Irish Gaelic Italian Japanese Javanese Ladino Latin Latvian Limburgish Malayalam Mandinka Manx Maori Mongolian Mormon Nahuatl Nigerian Norman Norse Norwegian Occitan Ojibwe Persian Phoenician Pictish Polish Portuguese Proto-Indo-European Quahadi Roman Russian Sabine Saimogaitian Sanskrit Saxon Scottish Semitic Shakespearean Silurian Sindarin Slavic Slavonic Slovak Sogdian Spanish Sumerian Swahili Swedish Tongan Turkic Vietnamese Visigothic Welsh Xitsonga Yiddish Yoruba
Abenaki African-Twi Akkadian Albanian Algonquian American Amorite Anglo-Saxon Arabic Aragonese Aramaic Araucan Armenian Assyrian Asturian Avestan Azeri Babylonian Basque Belarusian Benin Bosnian Brazilian Portuguese Breton Bulgarian Catalan Celtic Chechen Chinese Coptic Cornish Croatian Czech Dacian Dakota Sioux Danish Dutch Egyptian English Eskimo Estonian Faroese Finnish Flemish Frankish French Frisian Gaelic Galician Gaulish German Gothic Greek Hawaiian Hebrew Hittite Hungarian Hurrian Igbo Indonesian Iranian Irish Gaelic Italian Japanese Javanese Ladino Latin Latvian Limburgish Malayalam Mandinka Manx Maori Mongolian Mormon Nahuatl Nigerian Norman Norse Norwegian Occitan Ojibwe Persian Phoenician Pictish Polish Portuguese Proto-Indo-European Quahadi Roman Russian Sabine Saimogaitian Sanskrit Saxon Scottish Semitic Shakespearean Silurian Sindarin Slavic Slavonic Slovak Sogdian Spanish Sumerian Swahili Swedish Tongan Turkic Vietnamese Visigothic Welsh Xitsonga Yiddish Yoruba
Showing posts with label given name. Show all posts
Showing posts with label given name. Show all posts
Sunday, January 17, 2016
Saturday, November 22, 2014
1298
Counted up all the names I've introduced you through this year's 2014 New Names in 2014 post series. 1298 names learned so far. I still need to introduce you to 716 more names. 126 a week or 18 a day. Here's some to keep us on schedule.
GIRLS
Enza
Lonia
Lulabelle - I saw this name on a tombstone today in Mt. Hebron Cemetery here in Winchester.
Amarilla
Sosie
BOYS
Alanson
Alpheus
Azel
Dennon
Plimpton
NOT SURE OF GENDER
Givie
Tollie
GIRLS
Enza
Lonia
Lulabelle - I saw this name on a tombstone today in Mt. Hebron Cemetery here in Winchester.
Amarilla
Sosie
BOYS
Alanson
Alpheus
Azel
Dennon
Plimpton
NOT SURE OF GENDER
Givie
Tollie
Labels:
Alpheus,
Amarilla,
Azel,
baby names,
boy names,
Dennon,
Enza,
etymology,
first names,
girl names,
given name,
Lulabelle,
meanings of names,
name definitions,
Plimpton,
Sosie,
Tollie
Saturday, November 1, 2014
New Names for November
GIRLS
Bathshuah - Hebrew
Florisa - Spanish, pronounced 'floor EE sah'. Flor means 'flower' in Spanish. Florisa would mean something like 'flower-like'.
Lilla
Rosenda - may be a feminine variant of Rosendo, a Spanish form of the Visigothic name Rudecind, from the Germanic roots 'hrod' meaning 'fame' and 'sinths' meaning 'path'.
Theodate
Zilla
Bathshuah - Hebrew
Florisa - Spanish, pronounced 'floor EE sah'. Flor means 'flower' in Spanish. Florisa would mean something like 'flower-like'.
Lilla
Rosenda - may be a feminine variant of Rosendo, a Spanish form of the Visigothic name Rudecind, from the Germanic roots 'hrod' meaning 'fame' and 'sinths' meaning 'path'.
Theodate
Zilla
Thursday, February 27, 2014
410 New Names Learned So Far This Year
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My 'homeland' in Utah |
Ginsa
Hemma - Germanic, from "heim" meaning "home" or "homeland". Emma comes from the name Hemma.
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Indira Ghandi with her father |
Indira - Sanskrit, meaning "beauty".
Jessalyn- a combination of the male Hebrew name "Jessie" and the English name "Lyn" and mimics the form of the name Joscelyn. Jessie comes from Yishay and means "God's gift". Lyn derives from the Welsh "llyn" meaning "lake".
Kyren - Sanskrit, meaning "ray of light".
Leemoter
Macel
Jessalyn- a combination of the male Hebrew name "Jessie" and the English name "Lyn" and mimics the form of the name Joscelyn. Jessie comes from Yishay and means "God's gift". Lyn derives from the Welsh "llyn" meaning "lake".
BOYS

Leemoter
Macel
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
1,597 Names left to Learn in 2014
GIRLS
Novalee
Ova
Precia
BOYS
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The Way of St. James in Burgos, Spain |
Solon - ancient Greek meaning "wisdom".
Torrance - Celtic, meaning "from the knolls".
Zemariah - Hebrew, meaning "song of God".
Labels:
boy names,
etymology,
given name,
meanings of names,
Name definition,
name etymology,
name history,
name meaning,
name origin,
names,
Novalee,
Ova,
Precia,
Rosendo,
Rudecind,
Rudecindo,
Solon,
Torrance,
Zemariah
Monday, February 24, 2014
1, 618 Names left to learn this year after today's 7
GIRLS
Synolda - I've been digging around on this name for nearly a year now. I know one thing for certain, which is that it was a female name in use in Northern France or among the Norman invaders of Britain. I don't know much more for certain. Conjecture might associate it with 'chennault' a name given to a person who lived near a channel of water (such as the English channel separating England and France) or to the word 'saulte' as in the name of Saulte Sainte Marie, the name of a city on the Saint Mary's river in Ontario, Canada, so named by the French, perhaps, because of the rapids or waterfall located there, as 'saulte' means 'jump' (saltar in Spanish also means 'to jump, and 'salta' would be what you would say if telling someone to jump. Perhaps Synolda is an old French form of some word related to this root. But in the end, it may simply mean 'a waterfall' or perhaps a place on a river where one enters or leaves the river). It 'looks' more like the word 'synod', which is the word used to refer to a church council where doctrinal matters are decided. It comes from the Greek 'synodos' meaning 'assembly' or 'meeting'. It is also worth remembering that 'ot' is a common ending to French names and a often makes a name feminine, so the original form of the name may have looked and sounded different. Which makes me think of the Greek 'xeno' meaning 'stranger' or 'foreign'. The Vikings were strangers, at first, in France, their Norman descendants were 'foreign' to the people of England, and the Anglo Normans who came to Ireland were also. I would like to know for certain the origin and meaning of this name. For now, this will have to suffice.
UPDATE: I came across the name Sinella, a descendant of the Norman invaders of England, and I wonder if this could be related to Synolda?
Torkel - Norse, from "Tor" meaning "Thor" (the god of thunder) and "ketill" meaning "cauldron" so it means "Thor's cauldron" or 'helmet" as ketill can also mean helmet. Usually a male name, but I encountered it as a female name. There is quite a story about how Thor goes about getting a cauldron.
Uli- Germanic form of Ulli, meaning "heritage" or "patrimony". It can also be a short form of the Germanic name Ulrike, meaning "powerful ruler" or an Estonian form of the Latin Ursula, meaning "little female bear". It is also a form of the Irish name "Ula", meaning "sea jewel".
Vanderleia

BOYS
Welby- Old English, "from the farm by the spring".
Xurxo - Galician form of George.
Yasser - Arabic, meaning "to be rich" from 'yasira' which means "to become easy".

UPDATE: I came across the name Sinella, a descendant of the Norman invaders of England, and I wonder if this could be related to Synolda?
Torkel - Norse, from "Tor" meaning "Thor" (the god of thunder) and "ketill" meaning "cauldron" so it means "Thor's cauldron" or 'helmet" as ketill can also mean helmet. Usually a male name, but I encountered it as a female name. There is quite a story about how Thor goes about getting a cauldron.

Vanderleia

BOYS
Welby- Old English, "from the farm by the spring".
Xurxo - Galician form of George.
Yasser - Arabic, meaning "to be rich" from 'yasira' which means "to become easy".
Labels:
given name,
Name definition,
name discussion,
name history,
name meaning,
name origin,
old names,
Synolda,
Thor,
Tor,
Torkel,
Ula,
Uli,
Ulli,
Ulrike,
Ursula,
Vanderleia,
Vasser,
Welby,
Xurxo
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Sunday's Names
GIRLS
Din
Eiluned - Welsh, meaning"idol".
Floridalma- Spanish, probably a combination of 'florida' meaning 'flowering' and 'alma' meaning 'soul'.
Gulielma - Italian feminine form of the German name William, which derives from the roots "wil" meaning "will" or "desire" and "helm" meaning "helmet" or "protection".
BOYS
Hammurabi - Akkadian, from the Amorite "Ammurapi" meaning "the kinsman is a healer", from "ammu" "paternal kinsman" and "rapi" "healer". I would think that would make the name mean something more like "my father's kinsman is a healer".
Iah - Egyptian, meaning "moon". The name of the Egyptian moon god.
Egyptian hieroglyphs that represent the name of the moon god Iah
There was also a female bearer of the name Iah, daughter of a pharaoh, married to a pharaoh, and mother to another pharaoh and his wife (since they were brother and sister).
Jehiel - Hebrew, meaning "God lives", pronounced "jee HIE ul".
Din
Eiluned - Welsh, meaning"idol".
Floridalma- Spanish, probably a combination of 'florida' meaning 'flowering' and 'alma' meaning 'soul'.
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Code of Hammurabi, Oldest Known written laws |
Gulielma - Italian feminine form of the German name William, which derives from the roots "wil" meaning "will" or "desire" and "helm" meaning "helmet" or "protection".
BOYS
Hammurabi - Akkadian, from the Amorite "Ammurapi" meaning "the kinsman is a healer", from "ammu" "paternal kinsman" and "rapi" "healer". I would think that would make the name mean something more like "my father's kinsman is a healer".
Iah - Egyptian, meaning "moon". The name of the Egyptian moon god.
Egyptian hieroglyphs that represent the name of the moon god Iah
There was also a female bearer of the name Iah, daughter of a pharaoh, married to a pharaoh, and mother to another pharaoh and his wife (since they were brother and sister).
Jehiel - Hebrew, meaning "God lives", pronounced "jee HIE ul".
Labels:
Din,
Eiluned,
Floridalma,
given name,
Gulielma,
Hammurabi,
Iah,
Jehiel,
name discussion,
name etymology,
name history,
name meaning,
name origin,
onomastics,
personal name
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