What is the name meaning of CWIC. Phrases containing CWIC
See name meanings and uses of CWIC!CWIC
CWIC
Boy/Male
English
Smart
Surname or Lastname
English (chiefly West Midlands)
English (chiefly West Midlands) : habitational name from a place in Worcestershire named Cooksey, from the genitive case of the Old English personal name Cucu (perhaps a byname from Old English cwicu ‘lively’) + Old English ēg ‘island’.
Surname or Lastname
English, German, and Dutch
English, German, and Dutch : nickname for a lively or agile person, from Middle English quik, Middle High German quick, Middle Dutch quic ‘alive’, ‘lively’, ‘fresh’.English : habitational name for someone who lived at a place called Cowick (notably one in Devon), denoting an outlying dairy farm, from Old English cūwīc, from cū ‘cow’ + wīc ‘outlying settlement’.Cornish : habitational name from Gweek in the parish of Constantine, named from Cornish gwyk, which may have meant either ‘village’ or ‘forest’, or a topographic name from the same word.English : topographic name for someone who lived by a place overgrown with couch grass (Old English cwice).
CWIC
CWIC
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Name of Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
Bengali, Celebrity, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Jain, Kannada, Kashmiri, Malayalam, Marathi, Modern, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Sikh, Telugu
Rays; Sun Rays; Ray of Light
Girl/Female
Hebrew
Golden.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Goddess of Victory
Boy/Male
Hindu
Power
Boy/Male
African, Arabic, Muslim, Swahili
Benefactor; To be Contented
Male
English
Breath
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.Americanized spelling of German Kneip.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Sacred; Pious
Girl/Female
Native American
Repeat dance.
CWIC
CWIC
CWIC
CWIC
CWIC
n.
The acetabulum. See Acetabulum, 2. Q () the seventeenth letter of the English alphabet, has but one sound (that of k), and is always followed by u, the two letters together being sounded like kw, except in some words in which the u is silent. See Guide to Pronunciation, / 249. Q is not found in Anglo-Saxon, cw being used instead of qu; as in cwic, quick; cwen, queen. The name (k/) is from the French ku, which is from the Latin name of the same letter; its form is from the Latin, which derived it, through a Greek alphabet, from the Ph/nician, the ultimate origin being Egyptian.