What is the name meaning of NIZANTH. Phrases containing NIZANTH
See name meanings and uses of NIZANTH!NIZANTH
NIZANTH
Boy/Male
Tamil
Boy/Male
Hindu
NIZANTH
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Girl/Female
Indian, Sanskrit
Of Jungle; Perfume; Fragrant Earth
Male
Yiddish
(×—Ö·×סְקֶעל) Yiddish form of Hebrew Yechezkel (English Ezekiel), CHASKEL means "God will strengthen."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Leicestershire, recorded in Domesday Book as Cilebi. It was probably originally named with the Old English elements cild (see Child) + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’. Compare Chilton. The second element was then replaced some time after the Danish invasions by the Old Norse form býr.Christopher Kilby (1705–71), merchant and government contractor of the colonial era, was born in Boston, MA, as was his father, John. According to family tradition, his grandfather John was born in 1632 in Hertfordshire, England.
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Kamdev; Cupid
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kenyan
Lord of Direction
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the places so called, as for example Litton Cheney in Dorset (named from Old English hl̄de ‘torrent’ (from hlūd ‘loud’, ‘roaring’) + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’), or Litton in Somerset (from Old English hlid ‘slope’ or ‘gate’ + tūn), Derbyshire and North Yorkshire (both probably from Old English hlīð ‘slope’ + tūn).
Girl/Female
Tamil
Vasundara | வாஸà¯à®¨à¯à®¤à®°à®¾
The earth
Boy/Male
Hebrew
Torch.
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, and Irish
English, Scottish, and Irish : variant spelling of Hamill.French : topographic name for someone who lived and worked at an outlying farm dependent on the main village, Old French hamel (a diminutive from a Germanic element cognate with Old English hÄm ‘homestead’).German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : habitational name from the city of Hamlin, German Hameln, Yiddish Haml, where the Hamel river empties into the Weser. The name of the river probably derives from the Germanic element ham ‘water meadow’.Dutch : metonymic occupational name for a shepherd, from Middle Dutch hamel ‘wether’, ‘castrated ram’.A Hamel from Normandy, France, is documented in St. Jean et St. François, Quebec, in 1666.
Girl/Female
French
Feminine of Charles meaning manly.
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