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    Do you know what YOUR name means?

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    • S Offline
      stee
      last edited by

      STEPHEN
      Origin: Greek
      Meaning: Crowned One

      Surname - Crowley
      Origin: South West Ireland
      (in Irish - An Cruadhlaoch, which is "Hardy Warrior")

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      • Alan FraserA Offline
        Alan Fraser
        last edited by

        I haven't a clue. It could be Gaelic, it could be Germanic via Breton "Precious"; it could even be from the ancient Sarmatian tribe the Alani that spread out from Iran around the Black Sea area. No one knows for sure.
        My last name, though Scottish, probably has its origins (via the Normans) in the French word for strawberry (fraise). It forms part of one of the clan crests.
        It comes from one of William's barons who was famous for his strawberry daiquiris.

        ...and it's pronounced FRAY ZER, not FRAY SHURE. However you want to pronounce Frazier (almost unknown in the UK) over the other side of the pond is up to you. 😉

        3D Figures
        Were you required to walk 500 miles? Were you advised to walk 500 more?
        You could be entitled to compensation. Call the Pro Claimers now!

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        • R Offline
          Ross Macintosh
          last edited by

          ROSS
          Origin: Scotland
          Pronounced: Rosssss
          Meaning: I don't know if I should tell you this or not... Traditionally "Ross" as a given name was given to baby boys who were unusually well endowed if you get my drift. So in other words it means "hung like a horse". The clan Ross were descendants of a well-hung leader.

          MACINTOSH
          Origin: Scotland
          Pronounced: Mac-In-Tosh
          Meaning: Clan name. Descendants of Tosh. Tosh, our glorious ancestor, was a reggae singer from Jamaica. He worked with Bob Marley.
          Clan Motto: "Touch not a cat bot a glove" -- meaning is 'wear gloves when you handle cats'.

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          • FrederikF Offline
            Frederik
            last edited by

            @Bossy Rossy... ( 😆 )

            @unknownuser said:

            ROSS
            Gender: Masculine
            Usage: Scottish, English
            Pronounced: RAWS
            From a Scottish and English surname which meant "promontory" in Gaelic, originally belonging to someone who lived on a headland. A famous bearer of the surname was Sir James Clark Ross (1800-1862), an Antarctic explorer.

            @unknownuser said:

            Macintosh
            Noun
            Singular: macintosh
            Plural: macintoshes

            (UK) A raincoat.

            😲 Well wha'd ya know... 😆

            @unknownuser said:

            ALAN
            Gender: Masculine
            Usage: English, Scottish, Breton
            Pronounced: AL-ən (English)

            The meaning of this name is not known for certain, though it possibly means either "little rock" or "handsome" in Breton. Alternatively, it may derive from the tribal name of the Alans, an Iranian people who migrated into Europe in the 4th and 5th centuries. This was the name of several dukes of Brittany, and it was introduced to England by Breton settlers after the Norman conquest. Famous modern bearers include Alan Shepard (1923-1998), the first American in space and the fifth man to walk on the moon, and Alan Turing (1912-1954), a British mathematician and computer scientist.

            @unknownuser said:

            FRASER
            Gender: Masculine
            Usage: Scottish, English (Rare)
            Pronounced: FRAY-zər, FRAY-zhər [key]

            From a Scottish surname which is of unknown meaning. A famous bearer of the surname was Simon Fraser (1776-1862), a Canadian explorer.

            It's all in your name... 😆

            Cheers
            Kim Frederik

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            • L Offline
              lewiswadsworth
              last edited by

              I have a Chinese name, too, though I haven't thought about it in years. (My wife is Chinese-American.) I'm afraid I don't have the character written anywhere, or actually know how to draw it...I think it might even be a non-Mandarin dialect.

              I'll have to ask my father-in-law to write it for me again.

              It is pronounced similar to the English name "Lou" and means destruction.

              col sporcar si trova

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              • Phil MeadowsP Offline
                Phil Meadows
                last edited by

                Phillip is Ancient Greek and means "lover of horses". 😕 So I shorten it to Phil.

                Prince means prince.

                Meadows is english and means "lives in the meadow".

                So I'm a prince who loves horses so much he lives with them

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                • boofredlayB Offline
                  boofredlay
                  last edited by

                  @phil meadows said:

                  Phillip is Ancient Greek and means "lover of horses". 😕 So I shorten it to Phil.

                  So does that mean you love ponies? 😄

                  http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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                  • soloS Offline
                    solo
                    last edited by

                    Damn! everyone has some cool meaning, mine is a dull boring friggin ROCK.

                    Pete the rock ... jeez!

                    http://www.californiachaparral.com/images/555_mudslide_THE_ROCK.jpg

                    Here I am blocking traffic.

                    http://www.solos-art.com

                    If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                    • StinkieS Offline
                      Stinkie
                      last edited by

                      lol. Not just any rock, though, if I remember correctly from, er, God class. 😄

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                      • P Offline
                        pichuneke
                        last edited by

                        PICHUNEKE
                        Gender: Masculine
                        Usage: Spanglish, Klingon, Esperanto, Quenya, Orc
                        Pronounced: Dïefurgonthênsièlfënmatchbrongoûnderfragtèn
                        Meaning: Polite, Nobel Prize awarded, good person, handsome, strong, intelligent. The name is used by prophets when they want to call someone that is going to rule the world under a golden age of wisdom and peace.

                        🎉 🎉 🎉 👊

                        Forgive my spanglish...

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                        • GaieusG Offline
                          Gaieus
                          last edited by

                          🤣

                          Gai...

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • jujuJ Offline
                            juju
                            last edited by

                            @pichuneke said:

                            PICHUNEKE
                            Gender: Masculine
                            Usage: Spanglish, Klingon, Esperanto, Quenya, Orc
                            Pronounced: Dïefurgonthênsièlfënmatchbrongoûnderfragtèn
                            Meaning: Polite, Nobel Prize awarded, good person, handsome, strong, intelligent. The name is used by prophets when they want to call someone that is going to rule the world under a golden age of wisdom and peace.

                            🎉 🎉 🎉 👊

                            SoH 'oH vaj teblu'ta' vo' SoH 'ach SoH chenmoHta' jIH [smile]

                            Save the Earth, it's the only planet with chocolate.

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                            • P Offline
                              pichuneke
                              last edited by

                              @unknownuser said:

                              SoH 'oH vaj teblu'ta' vo' SoH 'ach SoH chenmoHta' jIH

                              @unknownuser said:

                              you am so full forth you but you made I

                              favicon

                              (www.tc.umn.edu)

                              I am sorry, but I only studied klingon for two years at the galactic academy and I don't fully understand your sentence 🤣

                              Forgive my spanglish...

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                              • jujuJ Offline
                                juju
                                last edited by

                                yup, I used that one, it seems like their database and translator needs more work.

                                That was supposed to say "you are so full of yourself, but you made me smile".

                                Save the Earth, it's the only planet with chocolate.

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                                • david_hD Offline
                                  david_h
                                  last edited by

                                  David . . Heberew. .. Beloved of God
                                  Hunter . . .Um . ..no idea. Any thoughts? 🤣

                                  It's ironic. Im a pacifist. don't like the guns.

                                  If I make it look easy...It is probably easy

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                                  • david_hD Offline
                                    david_h
                                    last edited by

                                    @solo said:

                                    Damn! everyone has some cool meaning, mine is a dull boring friggin ROCK.

                                    Pete the rock ... jeez!

                                    Here I am blocking traffic.

                                    Pete .. . That is the Coolest. The Bible calls Peter**--THE ROCKtn2_the_rock_2.jpg**or his Greek Name . ..Cephas. that's cool

                                    Pierre
                                    Pedro
                                    Pietro
                                    Pere
                                    Пётр

                                    Good Name. . .Beats the heck outta Dwayne. . .(apologies to any Dwayne's out there)

                                    If I make it look easy...It is probably easy

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                                    • TIGT Offline
                                      TIG Moderator
                                      last edited by

                                      "Peter, you are the rock on which I shall build my church..."

                                      A quote from Christ (read the Bible) that was a pretty good pun, but it has lost all of its humour in the English translation !

                                      .

                                      TIG

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                                      • david_hD Offline
                                        david_h
                                        last edited by

                                        One could get into a whole religious debate about Christ said in Matthew 16:13-16, but suffice it to say. . .Pete. . .It's a good Name.

                                        If I make it look easy...It is probably easy

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                                        • Alan FraserA Offline
                                          Alan Fraser
                                          last edited by

                                          Yes, Pete. You could have been called Cuthbert. It might mean couth and bright, but that's pretty poor compensation...or Everard "hard (strong) as a wild boar"...big deal. 😄

                                          3D Figures
                                          Were you required to walk 500 miles? Were you advised to walk 500 more?
                                          You could be entitled to compensation. Call the Pro Claimers now!

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • J Offline
                                            Jackson
                                            last edited by

                                            My first name is pretty self-explanatory, but my surname (Barkess) is Dutch or Norse I believe. The spelling has changed a lot over the centuries: Barcus, Barkas, Barkass are all evident somewhere on the family tree, but it is definitely distinct from "Barker", a well-known English name which is derived from either Middle English (tanner of leather), Old French (shepherd), High German (man who lived on a mountain) or modern English (man who sells fork handles).

                                            It's fairly common in a small area in the north of England, Tyne and Wear, but almost unheard of elsewhere- I think there's less than 10 individuals with the name Barkess in my homeland Scotland and I'm pretty sure I'm the only one in Sweden. Having said that, I was told that it meant the skipper of a canal barge in Dutch and "barkass" means a longboat in modern Swedish so it's possible it was originally a Nordic name. Either way, I believe the name first appears in the North of England only about 400 years ago so there's no vikings on my father's side, but my mother's family was from the North of Scotland in Aberdeenshire where many vikings "settled" so you never know, maybe Sweden is my homeland after all.

                                            Jackson

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