What is the name meaning of BONES. Phrases containing BONES
See name meanings and uses of BONES!BONES
BONES
Girl/Female
Indian
Remnants of the Burnt Human Body Bones
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit
One with Necklace of Bones
Biblical
men of Garmi, i.e., bones, or, my cause
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Skeleton; A Collection of Bones
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Great; A Kind of Weapon Made by Bones of Maharhi Dadhitchi
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Bone 2.Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic) : metronymic from the Yiddish female personal name Bone, of Latinate origin.
Surname or Lastname
Scottish and northern English
Scottish and northern English : nickname meaning ‘bones’. Compare Bain 2.Scottish : reduced form of McBane, with English patronymic -s.English, of Welsh origin : Anglicized form of Welsh ab Einws ‘son of Einws’, a pet form of the personal name Einon (see Eynon).English : from a derivative of Bain.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu
Diamond; Name of the Armament in the Hand of Indra it was Made of Dadhichi Rishi Bones
Girl/Female
Tamil
Kankalini | கநà¯à®•ாலிநீ
One with necklace of bones
Kankalini | கநà¯à®•ாலிநீ
Boy/Male
Biblical
Men of Garmi; ie. Bones or my cause.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from the adjective bony, denoting a scrawny individual with prominent bones.
BONES
BONES
Girl/Female
Teutonic
Powerful.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Indonesian
An Unusual Girl's Name
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a white-leather dresser, from Middle English whit ‘white’ + taw(i)er ‘tawer’ (from an agent derivative of Middle English taw(en) ‘to prepare’).John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–92), poet and active opponent of slavery, was descended from Thomas Whittier, who came to MA from England in 1638.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Black Beauty
Girl/Female
Australian, Bengali, Hindu, Indian, Telugu
Stage; Full of Knowledge
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : nickname for a crafty or ingenious person, from a reduced form of Old French engaine ‘ingenuity’, ‘trickery’ (Latin ingenium ‘native wit’). The word was also used in a concrete sense of a stratagem or device, particularly a trap.This surname has also assimilated reduced variants of Welsh Gurganus.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Kshirja | கà¯à®·à®¿à®°à®œà®¾
Goddess Lakshmi
Girl/Female
Hindu
Code
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
A Song
Surname or Lastname
English (Cheshire)
English (Cheshire) : habitational name from any of various minor places named with Old English ēcels ‘additional part of an estate’, from ēcan ‘to increase’. Compare Etchells.The earliest record of this surname is in Church Minshull, Cheshire, England, in 1566, when John, son of Thomas Eachus, was baptized. Peter Eachus married Margaret Pownall in Church Minshull on 21 April 1594.
BONES
BONES
BONES
BONES
BONES
n.
One who sets broken or dislocated bones; -- commonly applied to one, not a regular surgeon, who makes an occupation of setting bones.
v. t.
To overlap (each other); -- said of bones or fractured fragments.
n.
An instrument for scraping the periosteum from bones; a raspatory.
n.
The inner, or preaxial, and usually the larger, of the two bones of the leg or hind limb below the knee.
a.
Having the nasal bones separate.
n.
The larger of the two otoliths, or ear bones, found in most fishes.
a.
Having the maxillo-palatine bones separate from each other and from the vomer, which is pointed in front, as in the gulls, snipes, grouse, and many other birds.
n.
One of the bones or cartilages of the carpus, which articulates with the ulna and corresponds to the cuneiform in man.
n.
A bone, or one of a pair of bones, beneath the ethmoid region of the skull, forming a part a part of the partition between the nostrils in man and other mammals.
n.
An instrument for scraping bones. Y () Y, the twenty-fifth letter of the English alphabet, at the beginning of a word or syllable, except when a prefix (see Y-), is usually a fricative vocal consonant; as a prefix, and usually in the middle or at the end of a syllable, it is a vowel. See Guide to Pronunciation, // 145, 178-9, 272.
a.
Large; strong; -- from the gigantic bones shown at Roncesvalles, and alleged to be those of old heroes.
n.
A morbid growth or deposit of bony matter between or on the small pastern and the great pastern bones.
a.
Having a nail, claw, or hoof attached; -- said of certain bones of the feet.
n.
One of the hard, bony appendages which are borne on the jaws, or on other bones in the walls of the mouth or pharynx of most vertebrates, and which usually aid in the prehension and mastication of food.
n.
One of the bones of the carpus; the cuneiform. See Cuneiform (b).
a.
Of or pertaining to the scaphoid and lunar bones of the carpus.
v. t.
To deprive of bones, as meat; to bone.
a.
Having the bones of the palate arranged as in saurians, the vomer consisting of two lateral halves, as in the woodpeckers (Pici).
prep.
The ridge between the shoulder bones of a horse, at the base of the neck. See Illust. of Horse.
n.
Same as Boneset.