What is the name meaning of DAME. Phrases containing DAME
See name meanings and uses of DAME!DAME
DAME
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English, Greek
Tame; Saint Damian was the Patron Saint of Hairdressers
Girl/Female
English
A , meaning love. Famous bearer: Dame Gracie Fields.
Boy/Male
Greek
Gentle; to tame.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Heart, Conscience
Male
Czechoslovakian
, tame.
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Heart Conscience
Female
Spanish
Spanish name ESMERALDA means "emerald." Victor Hugo gave his gypsy heroine this name in his novel, The Hunchback of Notre Dame.Â
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Notre-Dame-de-Courson in Calvados, France, which was named with the Romano-Gallic personal name Curtius (from curtus ‘short’) + the locative suffix -o, genitive -onis. There is also a place called Curzon in Vendée, but this is not the source of the English surname.
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from Old French dame ‘lady’ (Latin domina ‘mistress’), originally a nickname for a foppish man or a title of respect for a widow. It may also have been a metonymic occupational name for someone in the service of a lady.
Boy/Male
Czech Czechoslovakian
Red earth.
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim, Sindhi
Conscience; Heart
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
One of Good Manners; Simple
Boy/Male
Indian
Heart, Conscience
Boy/Male
Australian, Greek
Taming
Female
Cornish
, under the cliff.
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DAME
n.
The mistress of a family in common life, or the mistress of a common school; as, a dame's school.
n.
Damewort.
n.
A short, straight, horizontal mark [-], placed over vowels to denote that they are to be pronounced with a long sound; as, a, in dame; /, in s/am, etc.
n.
A cruciferrous plant (Hesperis matronalis), remarkable for its fragrance, especially toward the close of the day; -- called also rocket and dame's violet.
n.
A woman in general, esp. an elderly woman.
n.
In France, a name for a woman who is supported by her lovers, and devotes herself to idleness, show, and pleasure; -- so called from the church of Notre Dame de Lorette, in Paris, near which many of them resided.
a.
Pertaining to Aphrodite or Venus. "Aphrodisian dames" [that is, courtesans].
n.
See Forkbeard.
n.
A mistress of a family, who is a lady; a woman in authority; especially, a lady.
n.
The European forked hake or hake's-dame (Phycis blennoides); -- also called great forked beard.
n.
A mother; -- applied to human beings and quadrupeds.