What is the name meaning of PHAINDRA. Phrases containing PHAINDRA
See name meanings and uses of PHAINDRA!PHAINDRA
PHAINDRA
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
King of Gods
PHAINDRA
PHAINDRA
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, Australian, British, Christian, English
Fuller; Cloth Washer; One who Thickens Cloth
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Another Name of Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
Hebrew
Jehovah has healed. Biblical Josiah became king of Judah at eight after his father was...
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Herefordshire, the etymology of which is uncertain. The second element is Old English ēg ‘island’, ‘piece of higher ground in a low-lying area’; the first appears to be hwītan, which is either the genitive singular of an Old English byname Hwīta (meaning ‘white’), or the weak dative case (originally used after a preposition and article) of the adjective hwīt ‘white’.John Whitney came from London, England, to Watertown, MA, in 1635, and had numerous prominent descendents.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Worthy of Praise
Male
Welsh
Variant spelling of Welsh Owen, OWYN means "born of yew."
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia) and German
English (East Anglia) and German : from Middle English pilegrim, pelgrim, Middle High German bilgerīn, pilgerīn ‘pilgrim’ (Latin peregrinus, pelegrinus ‘traveler’), a nickname for a person who had been on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land or to some seat of devotion nearer home, such as Santiago de Compostella, Rome, or Canterbury. Such pilgrimages were often imposed as penances, graver sins requiring more arduous journeys. In both England and Germany Pilgrim was occasionally used as a personal name, from which the surname could also have arisen.
Girl/Female
Indian
Queen bee
Male
Norse
Old Norse name composed of the name of the Norse god Thor, and the word steinn "stone," hence "Þórr's stone."
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, and northern Irish
English, Scottish, and northern Irish : occupational name for a maker of machinery, mostly in wood, of any of a wide range of kinds, from Old English wyrhta, wryhta ‘craftsman’ (a derivative of wyrcan ‘to work or make’). The term is found in various combinations (for example, Cartwright and Wainwright), but when used in isolation it generally referred to a builder of windmills or watermills.Common New England Americanized form of French Le Droit, a nickname for an upright person, a man of probity, from Old French droit ‘right’, in which there has been confusion between the homophones right and wright.
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