What is the name meaning of GRANI. Phrases containing GRANI
See name meanings and uses of GRANI!GRANI
GRANI
Girl/Female
Celtic Irish
Love.
Boy/Male
British, Hebrew, Indian, Parsi
Prince; Granite
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : occupational name for a farm bailiff, responsible for overseeing the collection of rent in kind into the barns and storehouses of the lord of the manor. This official had the Anglo-Norman French title grainger, Old French grangier, from Late Latin granicarius, a derivative of granica ‘granary’ (see Grange).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Nottinghamshire named Granby, from the Old Norse personal name Grani + bý ‘farmstead’.
Girl/Female
Celtic, Gaelic, German, Irish
Love; Grain
Boy/Male
Norse
Son of Gunnar.
Girl/Female
Irish
From gran “grain, corn.†Grainne in ancient Ireland was the patron of the harvest. In later legends Grainne was the name of the beautiful daughter of a High King of Ireland, Cormac Mac Art. She had been promised in marriage to the king Fionn Mac Cool (read the legend). When Grainne saw him at the wedding banquet she realised Fionn was too old for her and put a “geis,†a love spell on Fionn’s nephew, Diarmuid. They ran away together but Fionn’s pursuit prevented them from spending two consecutive nights in the same place. Megalithic sites throughout Ireland are still traditionally referred to as “the bed of Grainne and Diarmuid†(read the legend).
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : topographic name for someone who lived by a granary, from Middle English, Old French grange (Latin granica ‘granary’, ‘barn’, from granum ‘grain’). In some cases, the surname has arisen from places named with this word, for example in Dorset and West Yorkshire in England, and in Ardèche and Jura in France. The Marquis de Lafayette owned a property named Lagrange, and there used to be a place in VT so named in his honor.
GRANI
GRANI
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
A narrator of hadith
Boy/Male
Tamil
Srivathsan | ஸà¯à®°à¯€à®µà®¾à®¤à¯à®¸à®¨
Brilliant, Lord venkateswara
Girl/Female
Australian, French, Greek, Swedish
People's Victory; Victory; Useful; Bringer of Victory; Female Version of Nicholas
Girl/Female
Tamil
Possessive
Male
Polish
Pet form of Slavic names beginning with the element jaro, JAREK means "spring."Â In use by the Polish.
Boy/Male
German
Highborn Ruler; Noble Leader; Ruler of All
Girl/Female
Indian, Tamil
God Name
Female
Italian
Feminine form of Italian Crocifisso, CROCIFISSA means "cross; crucifix" or "way of the cross."Â
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Divine Child
Boy/Male
Hindu
Song
GRANI
GRANI
GRANI
GRANI
GRANI
n.
The act or the process of forming into granite.
n.
A kind of granite from Luxullian, Cornwall, characterized by the presence of radiating groups of minute tourmaline crystals.
a.
Not stratified; -- applied to massive rocks, as granite, porphyry, etc., and also to deposits of loose material, as the glacial till, which occur in masses without layers or strata.
a.
Relating to, or like, syenite; as, syenitic granite.
a.
Consisting of granite; as, granitic mountains.
a.
Eating grain; feeding or subsisting on seeds; as, granivorous birds.
a.
Resembling granite in structure or shape.
a.
Resembling granite in granular appearance; as, granitoid gneiss; a granitoid pavement.
n.
Orig., a rock composed of quartz, hornblende, and feldspar, anciently quarried at Syene, in Upper Egypt, and now called granite.
n.
A kind of granite or gneiss containing a silvery talcose mineral.
a.
Pertaining to, or containing, schorl; as, schorly granite.
n.
A term now used to designate any one of a family of minerals, hydrous silicates of alumina, with lime, soda, potash, or rarely baryta. Here are included natrolite, stilbite, analcime, chabazite, thomsonite, heulandite, and others. These species occur of secondary origin in the cavities of amygdaloid, basalt, and lava, also, less frequently, in granite and gneiss. So called because many of these species intumesce before the blowpipe.
a.
Formed or crystallized at depths the earth's surface; -- said of granite, gneiss, and other rocks, whose crystallization is believed of have taken place beneath a great thickness of overlying rocks. Opposed to epigene.
a.
Granitic.
a.
Like granite in composition, color, etc.; having the nature of granite; as, granitic texture.
n.
A massive, compact limestone; a variety of calcite, capable of being polished and used for architectural and ornamental purposes. The color varies from white to black, being sometimes yellow, red, and green, and frequently beautifully veined or clouded. The name is also given to other rocks of like use and appearance, as serpentine or verd antique marble, and less properly to polished porphyry, granite, etc.
a.
Completely crystalline; -- said of a rock like granite, all the constituents of which are crystalline.
n.
An imitation of any veined and ornamental stone, as marble, formed by a substratum of finely ground gypsum mixed with glue, the surface of which, while soft, is variegated with splinters of marble, spar, granite, etc., and subsequently colored and polished.
n.
In Egyptian art, an image of granite or porphyry, having a human head, or the head of a ram or of a hawk, upon the wingless body of a lion.