What is the name meaning of COAD. Phrases containing COAD
See name meanings and uses of COAD!COAD
COAD
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Coad.
Surname or Lastname
English (Devon)
English (Devon) : from Middle English cÅde ‘cobbler’s wax’, probably applied as an occupational nickname for a cobbler’s assistant. Alternatively, it may be a topographic name from Old Cornish cuit ‘wood’.
COAD
COAD
Girl/Female
Greek
Alive.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller of bows, from Middle English bow (Old English boga, from būgan ‘to bend’). Before the invention of gunpowder, the bow was an important long-range weapon for shooting game as well as in warfare. Boga is also found as a personal name in Old English, and it is possible that this survived into Middle English and so may lie behind the surname in some instances. In other cases (for example, Richard atte Bowe, 1306), the name is topographic, from the same word in the transferred sense ‘arched bridge’, ‘river bend’, an allusion to their similarity in shape to a drawn bow.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buadhaigh (see Bogue).
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Cold; Frost; Snow; Mist; Dew
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Blessed with Beauty
Boy/Male
Arabic, Australian, Muslim
Tale
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Servant of the Great
Girl/Female
Australian, Danish, Finnish, German, Swedish
Wagtail Bird; Ruler
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Rock
Boy/Male
Afghan, Arabic, Muslim
Dear to Allah
Female
Native American
Native American Miwok name SITALA means "of good memory."
COAD
COAD
COAD
COAD
COAD
n.
The assistant of a bishop or of a priest holding a benefice.
n.
An adjuvant.
a.
Mutually assisting or operating; helping.
n.
The state or office of a coadjutor; joint assistance.
n.
Joint help; cooperation.
v. i.
To share in a venture.
n.
A fellow adventurer.
a.
United at the base, as contiguous lobes of a leaf.
n.
A female coadjutor or assistant.
n.
One who aids another; an assistant; a coworker.
n.
A joint or coadjutant bishop.
n.
Union, as in one body or mass; unity.
n.
An adventure in which two or more persons are partakers.
a.
Mutually assisting.
a.
Rendering mutual aid; coadjutant.
n.
Coadunation.
n.
An assistant.
a.
Cooperating.
n.
Alt. of Coadjutrix
a.
Adapted one to another; as, coadapted pulp and tooth.