What is the name meaning of KULPREM. Phrases containing KULPREM
See name meanings and uses of KULPREM!KULPREM
KULPREM
KULPREM
Girl/Female
Bengali, Indian
Goddess Durga
Boy/Male
Australian, Latin
Beyond Praise
Boy/Male
Tamil
Bal Bhadra | பலபதà¯à®°
(Brother of Krishna)
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the various places, for example in Hertfordshire, Kent, and Somerset, so named from Old English strǣt ‘paved highway’, ‘Roman road’ (Latin strata (via)). In the Middle Ages the word at first denoted a Roman road but later also came to denote the main street in a town or village, and so the surname may also have been a topographic name for someone who lived on a main street.Jewish : Americanized form of the Sephardic surname Chetrit, of uncertain origin.Americanized form of Ashkenazic Jewish Strasser and a number of other similar surnames.The Rev. Nicholas Street (1603–74) came from England to Taunton, MA, between 1630 and 1638, and later moved to New Haven, CT, where his descendant Augustus Russell Street, a leader in art education, was born in 1791 and went on to become one of the most important early benefactors of Yale College.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Punjabi, Sikh
Lord; God's Lamp
Boy/Male
Hindu
Sun
Boy/Male
American, British, English
From the Rye Field
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit
Possessing Rich Jewels
Girl/Female
Irish
From the Latin name Rosa and means “little rose.†Records show that the name has been in use in Ireland since the sixteenth century. When the expression of Irish patriotic poetry and song was outlawed during Ireland’s troubled and turbulent past, the Irish bards would disguise their nationalistic verse as love songs. In the figure of Roisin Dubh (“Dark Rosaleenâ€), a Gaelic poem translated by James Clarence Mangan in 1835, the name became a poetic symbol of Ireland, reflecting the Irish tradition of disguising outlawed patriotic verse as love songs where she is told not to be downhearted for her friends are returning from abroad to come to her aid.
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