What is the name meaning of PANISHKA. Phrases containing PANISHKA
See name meanings and uses of PANISHKA!PANISHKA
PANISHKA
Girl/Female
Hindu
Girl/Female
Tamil
PANISHKA
PANISHKA
Male
Italian
Italian name derived from the patronymic surname Alvisio, which ultimately derived from Germanic Hlodovic, thus sharing the same etymology as French Louis, ALVISE means "famous warrior."
Girl/Female
Arabic
Head; Foremost; Blooming; Flourishing
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Great Person
Girl/Female
Tamil
Sudeshna | ஸà¯à®¤à¯‡à®·à®¨à®¾
Well-born (Wife of king Virata)
Girl/Female
American, British, Christian, English
Noble Strength
Boy/Male
English American Latin
Contemporary phonetic'enduring.
Surname or Lastname
Dutch and German
Dutch and German : occupational name for a stonemason or someone who used or made pickaxes or chisel, from bicke ‘pickaxe’, ‘chisel’ + the agent suffix -er. Compare Bick.English : occupational name for a beekeeper, Middle English biker (from Old English bīcere). Bees were important in medieval England because their honey provided the only means of sweetening food (sugar being a more recent importation); honey was also used in preserving.English : habitational name from Bicker in Lincolnshire or Byker in Tyne and Wear, both named with the Old English preposition bī ‘by’, ‘beside’ + Old Norse kjarr ‘wet ground’, ‘brushwood’.Cars Bicker was a wealthy merchant and one of the commissioners to New Netherland under the West India Company’s 1621 charter.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Zechariah. Biblical Prophet's name.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Everlasting Beauty
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Lancashire)
English (mainly Lancashire) : habitational name from any of several places named Halton, usually from Old English h(e)alh ‘nook’, ‘hollow’ + tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’. Halton in Cheshire, however, is possibly named from an Old English hÄthel ‘heathery place’ + tÅ«n, and Halton in Northumberland from an Old English hÄw ‘look out’ + hyll ‘hill’ + tÅ«n.Irish : altered form of O’Haltahan, an Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hUltacháin ‘descendant of Ultachán’, a diminutive of Ultach ‘Ulsterman’. This is a rare Fermanagh surname, which is sometimes Anglicized as Nolan.Most English bearers of this name trace their descent from William de Halton, who was living at Halton, Lancashire, in 1346.
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