What is the name meaning of HOPPING. Phrases containing HOPPING
See name meanings and uses of HOPPING!HOPPING
HOPPING
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Hopping.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : probably from an unattested Middle English word hoping, denoting a dweller in a valley (see Hope).
HOPPING
HOPPING
Girl/Female
Tamil
Pleasing
Girl/Female
Tamil
Lover
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for the buyer of provisions for a large household, from a reduced form of Anglo-Norman French acatour (Late Latin acceptator, an agent derivative of acceptare ‘to accept’). Modern English caterer results from the addition of a second agent suffix to the word.Slovenian (ÄŒater) : status name for a person who read out the Slovenian ceremonial text at the installation of the Carantanian rulers and, later, Carinthian dukes, derived from the dialect verb Äatiti ‘to read’. Carantania was the early medieval Slovenian state on the territory of present-day Carinthia and Styria, now divided between Austria and Slovenia. The people’s installation of the Carantanian rulers was an exceptional example of democratic elections in medieval Europe. Thomas Jefferson knew about it and was influenced by it in his thinking about American Independence.Perhaps also an Americanized spelling of German Köter (see Koetter).
Biblical
a carpenter
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil
Youthful
Male
Arthurian
, father of Bronwen.
Boy/Male
Indian
Made of Jewels
Girl/Female
Tamil
Fairness
Boy/Male
Muslim
Famous, On the top, Heights, Greatest
Girl/Female
Arabic, Indonesian
An Unusual Girl's Name
HOPPING
HOPPING
HOPPING
HOPPING
HOPPING
n.
A gathering of hops.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Hop
n.
A yearly expedition on the Thames to take up young swans and mark them, as by Companies of Dyers and Vintners; -- called also swan-hopping.
n.
A child's game, in which a player, hopping on one foot, drives a stone from one compartment to another of a figure traced or scotched on the ground; -- called also hoppers.
n.
The act of one who, or that which, hops; a jumping, frisking, or dancing.
v. i.
To gather hops. [Perhaps only in the form Hopping, vb. n.]
n.
A corruption of Swan-upping.