What is the name meaning of PAYNE. Phrases containing PAYNE
See name meanings and uses of PAYNE!PAYNE
PAYNE
Boy/Male
English Latin
Pagan.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Paine. This is also a well-established surname in Ireland.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Kent and Sussex)
English (mainly Kent and Sussex) : from the Middle English personal name Pain(e), Payn(e) (Old French Paien, from Latin Paganus), introduced to Britain by the Normans. The Latin name is a derivative of pagus ‘outlying village’, and meant at first a person who lived in the country (as opposed to Urbanus ‘city dweller’), then a civilian as opposed to a soldier, and eventually a heathen (one not enrolled in the army of Christ). This remained a popular name throughout the Middle Ages, but it died out in the 16th century.Thomas Payne, who was a freeman of the Plymouth Colony in 1639, was the founder of a large American family, which included Robert Treat Paine (1731–1814), one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The author of the republican treatise The Rights of Man, Thomas Paine (1737–1809), left England for North America in the mid 1770s, where he became involved in the movement that led to independence. His pamphlet of 1776, Common Sense, influenced the Declaration of Independence and furnished some of the arguments justifying it.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Chinese, English, Latin
Pagan; Countryman
PAYNE
PAYNE
Boy/Male
Tamil
Sayantan | ஸயாஂதநÂ
Brave
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi
Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
British, Celtic, English, Gaelic, Irish
Warrior; Place Name; From the Narrow Forest; Surname
Boy/Male
French
Of the King.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Dusky; Mother of Lord Hanuman
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of various places, in Lincolnshire, Northumberland, Staffordshire, and South Yorkshire, so called from Old English fenn ‘marsh’, ‘fen’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’Irish : English surname adopted by bearers of Gaelic Ó Fionnachta (see Finnerty) or Ó Fiachna ‘descendant of Fiachna’, an old personal name Anglicized as Feighney and sometimes mistranslated as Hunt (see Fee).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : Americanized form of various like-sounding names, for example Finkelstein (see Funke).
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Lover
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : variant of Durant.Americanized form of Hungarian Durándi, a habitational name for someone from a place called Duránd, in former Szepes county.There was a Parisian family of this name in Quebec city in 1661. In 1662 a Durand from Saintonge married Catherine Anenontha, daughter of Nicolas Arendanki and Jeanne Otrihouandit, Hurons. A family called Durand from Angoumois was in Quebec by 1665; and two from Chartres were in Quebec by 1669 and 1673.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : status name from Middle English thewe ‘thrall’, ‘slave’ (Old English þēow).
Girl/Female
Latin American Shakespearean
From the forest. Rhea Silvia was the mother of Rome's founders, Remus and Romulus.
PAYNE
PAYNE
PAYNE
PAYNE
PAYNE
n.
The finest and whitest bread made in the Middle Ages; -- called also paynemain, payman.