What is the name meaning of MACK. Phrases containing MACK
See name meanings and uses of MACK!MACK
MACK
Boy/Male
Scottish
Son of Henry.
Boy/Male
Scottish
Son of the fair born.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English personal name Kynsey, a survival of Old English Cynesige, composed of the elements cyne ‘royal’ + sige ‘victory’.This name may also have assimilated some cases of Scottish MacKenzie, with the Mac prefix omitted.Possibly an Americanized spelling of Swiss German Künzi (see Kuenzi).The paternal grandfather of NJ and PA legislator John Kinsey (1693–1750) was one of the commissioners sent out from England in 1677 by the West Jersey proprietors to buy land from the Indians and to lay out a town. John was the leader of the Quaker party in the PA assembly and chief justice of the PA supreme court.
Boy/Male
Scottish
Son of Kinley.
Girl/Female
Scottish American
Son of Kenzie; fair; favored one.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, Christian, Danish, French, Gaelic, Latin, Scottish
Son of; Taken from Mackenzie; Greatest; Finely Made; Comely
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Maxine, MAXENE means either "the greatest rival" or "the stream of Mack."Â
Male
English
Originally a short form of surnames, mostly Scottish, beginning with Mac-, MACK means "son of," it is now sometimes given as a forename.Â
Female
English
Short form of Scottish unisex Mackenzie, KENZIE means "comely, finely made."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Northamptonshire, so named from the genitive case of the northern English personal name Mack + Old English ēg ‘island’, ‘low-lying land’.Irish : variant of Mackesy, an Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Macasa ‘descendant of Macus’, a personal name which is probably a form of Magnus.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.South German : topographic name for someone who lived at the upper end of a village on a hill, from Middle High German ober, obar ‘above’. In other cases, it may have denoted someone who lived on an upper floor of a building with two or more floors.North German : topographic for someone who lived on the bank of a river or stream name, standardized from Middle Low German over ‘river bank’.Possibly a shortened form of any of various German compound names formed with Ober- (see entries below).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from German Ober ‘senior’, ‘chief’. In some cases it can denote a rabbi; in others it is ornamental.A 17th-century American bearer of this name, Richard Ober (1641–1715/16), emigrated from Abbotsbury, Dorset, England, to the Salem colony and settled in Mackerel Cove, MA, later Beverly. His descendant Frederick Albion Ober, who was born in Beverly, MA, in 1849, was an ornithologist who discovered 22 new species of birds in the Lesser Antilles, the flycatcher Myiarchus oberi, and oriole Icterus oberi.
Boy/Male
Scottish
Son of the thane.
Female
English
Feminine form of English unisex Mackenzie, MAKENZIE means "comely, finely made."
Girl/Female
American, British, English, Latin
Mack's Pool; Greatest
Boy/Male
Celtic Scottish American
Son of.
Female
English
Feminine form of English Max, MAXINE means either "the greatest rival" or "the stream of Mack."Â
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained. It occurs chiefly in Hampshire and Wiltshire.It is also established in Ireland, where it may be an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Giolla Eóin (see McLean).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Mackley in Derbyshire, which may have been named in Old English as ‘Macca’s forest’, from an unattested personal name + lēah ‘woodland clearing’, ‘glade’.Scottish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Donnshleibhe ‘son of Donnshleibhe’, a personal name literally meaning ‘brown hill’.Probably also an Americanized form of German Mä(g)gli (see Magley).
Boy/Male
Scottish American
Fair; favored one. 'Son of the fair man' or 'Son of Kenzie'.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Old French maquerel ‘bawd’.English : from Middle English makerel ‘mackerel’ (the fish), hence a metonymic occupational name for a fisherman or a seller of these fish.English : Possibly also from Middle English mackerel ‘red scorch marks (on the skin)’, perhaps a descriptive nickname for someone with a noticeable birthmark.
MACK
MACK
Girl/Female
Muslim
Eloquent
Female
English
Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Éirinn, AERYN means "Ireland."Â
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Cool Like Autumn
Boy/Male
Gaelic Irish
Ardent.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Shadow
Boy/Male
Hindu
Girl/Female
Hindu
Famous person, One who is having fame
Boy/Male
Tamil
Girvan | கிரà¯à®µà®¾à®¨
Language of God
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
A Hindu Month
Boy/Male
Arabic, Indian, Muslim
Vision; Spectre
MACK
MACK
MACK
MACK
MACK
a.
Like or pertaining to the Mackerel family.
v. t.
To blur or double, as an impression from type; to mackle.
n.
Any one of several species of large oceanic fishes belonging to the Mackerel family, especially the common or great tunny (Orcynus / Albacora thynnus) native of the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. It sometimes weighs a thousand pounds or more, and is extensively caught in the Mediterranean. On the American coast it is called horse mackerel. See Illust. of Horse mackerel, under Horse.
n.
The chub mackerel. See under Chub.
n.
Any fish of the family Scombridae, of which the mackerel (Scomber) is the type.
n.
Any carangoid fish of the genus Trachurus, especially T. trachurus, or T. saurus, of Europe and America, and T. picturatus of California. Called also skipjack, and horse mackerel.
n. pl.
A division of fishes including the mackerels, tunnies, and allied fishes.
n.
A rock trout (Pleurogrammus monopterygius) found on the coast of Alaska; -- called also striped fish, and Atka mackerel.
n.
A waterproof outer garment; -- so called from the name of the inventor.
n.
A genus of acanthopterygious fishes which includes the common mackerel.
n.
The common tunny, or house mackerel.
v. t. & i.
To blur, or be blurred, in printing, as if there were a double impression.
n.
A young mackerel about two years old.
n.
Same Macule.
n.
The chub mackerel.
n.
A blur, or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little; a mackle.
n.
A mode of fishing with a hand line for pollack, mackerel, and the like.
a.
A (comparatively) narrow passageway connecting two large bodies of water; -- often in the plural; as, the strait, or straits, of Gibraltar; the straits of Magellan; the strait, or straits, of Mackinaw.
v.
To blur; especially (Print.), to blur or double an impression from type. See Mackle.