What is the name meaning of CRASS. Phrases containing CRASS
See name meanings and uses of CRASS!CRASS
CRASS
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Old French, Middle English cras ‘big’, ‘fat’ (Latin crassus).Possibly an altered spelling of German Krass.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Crass.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Crass.
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : nickname for a lusty man, from Middle English craske ‘fat’, ‘lusty’ (see Crass).
Surname or Lastname
English and German
English and German : topographic name for someone who owned or lived by a meadow, or a metonymic occupational name for someone who made or sold hay, from Middle English gras, Middle High German gras ‘grass’, ‘pasture’, ‘grazing’.English : nickname for a stout man, from Anglo-Norman French gras ‘fat’, from Latin crassus (which was itself used as a Roman family name), with the initial changed under the influence of grossus (see Gross).Scottish : occupational name, reduced from Gaelic greusaiche ‘shoemaker’. A certain John Grasse alias Cordonar (Middle English cordewaner ‘shoemaker’) is recorded in Scotland in 1539.South German : nickname for an irascible man, from Middle High German graz ‘intense’, ‘angry’.
CRASS
CRASS
Female
Scandinavian
 Feminine form of Scandinavian Tor, TORA means "Thor" or "thunder."
Boy/Male
Tamil
Ananinay | அநாநீநய
Indestructible, Another name for Vishnu
Boy/Male
Muslim
Early Imam (Leader) of Islam.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for a grower or seller of fennel (Old English finugle, fenol, from Late Latin fenuculum). Fennel was widely used in the Middle Ages as a herb for seasoning. The surname may also have been a topographic name for someone who lived near a place where the herb grew or was grown.English : Reaney also identifies this as a derivative of Fitz Neal ‘son of Neal’, citing as an example Fennells Wood, a place name recorded in 1391 as Fenelgrove and named for a Robert FitzNeel (1283).Irish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Fionnghail ‘descendant of Fionnghal’, a personal name composed of the elements fionn ‘fair’, ‘white’ + gal ‘valor’.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Pious;
Boy/Male
Afghan, Arabic, Indian, Muslim
Strong; Firm
Girl/Female
American, Australian, Christian, French, Irish, Welsh
Small Valley; Pure; Holy; Valley; Clean; From the Glen
Boy/Male
American, British, English
Lives at the Fortress
Girl/Female
Hindu
CRASS
CRASS
CRASS
CRASS
CRASS
a.
A semisolid mass or clot, especially that formed in coagulation of the blood.
n.
One of several species of similar fishes of the genus Tylosurus, of which one species (T. marinus) is common on the Atlantic coast. T. Caribbaeus, a very large species, and T. crassus, are more southern; -- called also needlefish. Many of the common names of the European garfish are also applied to the American species.
n.
Grossness; coarseness; thickness; density.
a.
Gross; thick; dense; coarse; not elaborated or refined.
a.
Alt. of Crassamentum
n.
See Crassament.
a.
Stupid; gross; crass; as, dense ignorance.
n.
Grossness.
n.
A grackle (Quiscalus crassirostris) native of Jamaica. It often associates with domestic cattle, and rids them of insects.