What is the name meaning of STROM. Phrases containing STROM
See name meanings and uses of STROM!STROM
STROM
Boy/Male
Hindu
A strom God
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived beside a stream, Middle English streme.Americanized form of Swedish Ström or Danish Strøm (see Strom).
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Newcastle and Durham)
English (mainly Newcastle and Durham) : of uncertain origin, probably a derivative of northern Middle English stang ‘pole’ (of Old Norse origin). Possible meanings include a topographic name for someone who lived by a pole or stake (compare Stakes) or an occupational name for someone armed with one. Alternatively, it may be a nickname for someone who had ‘ridden the stang’, i.e. been carried on a pole through the streets as an object of derision, in punishment for some misdemeanor. However, this custom is of uncertain antiquity.Orcadian : probably a habitational name from a minor place called Stanagar in the parish of Stromness.German : occupational name for a maker of shafts for spears and the like, from an agent derivative of Middle High German stange ‘pole’, ‘shaft’.
Boy/Male
Tamil
A strom God
Boy/Male
Czech, Czechoslovakian, German
Tree; Stream
STROM
STROM
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English dyse, dyce ‘die’, ‘dice’, ‘chance’, ‘luck’, probably applied as a nickname for an habitual dice player or gambler or as a metonymic occupational name for a maker of dice. Compare Deas.Possibly also an Americanized spelling of German Deiss.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Girl/Female
Australian, Hebrew, Latin, Swedish
Bitter; Star of the Sea
Male
English
English surname transferred to forename use, derived from the old Scottish Gaelic personal name Bláán, BLAIN means "little yellow one."
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim, Sindhi
Fire; Sparkle of Light
Girl/Female
Indian
Biblical
house of my month, or of early figs
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Radiant; Brilliant
Boy/Male
German
With Honor
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Beloved God
STROM
STROM
STROM
STROM
STROM
n.
A genus of marine gastropods in which the shell has the outer lip dilated into a broad wing. It includes many large and handsome species commonly called conch shells, or conchs. See Conch.
n.
A layer or mass of cellular tissue, especially that part of the thallus of certain fungi which incloses the perithecia.
n.
The history of the formation of stratified rocks.
n.
Any marine gastropod shell of the genus Strombus. See Strombus.
n.
One of two or more species of marine food fishes of the genus Stromateus (S. niger, S. argenteus) native of Southern Europe and Asia.
n.
An ingredient of the Mosaic incense, probably the operculum of some kind of strombus.
a.
Formed or shaped like a top.
a.
Miscellaneous; composed of different kinds.
n.
A fossil shell of the genus Strombus.
a.
Coiled into the shape of a screw or a helix.
prep.
Without; as, senza stromenti, without instruments.
n.
A steel-gray mineral of metallic luster. It is a sulphide of silver and copper.
n.
Any marine univalve shell of the genus Rostellaria; -- called also spindle stromb.
n.
The colorless porous framework, or stroma, of red blood corpuscles from which the zooid, or hemoglobin and other substances of the corpuscles, may be dissolved out.
n.
Any marine univalve mollusk of the genus Strombus and allied genera. See Conch, and Strombus.
a.
Of, pertaining to, or like, Strombus.
pl.
of Stroma
n.
A California harvest fish (Stromateus simillimus), highly valued as a food fish.
n.
The connective tissue or supporting framework of an organ; as, the stroma of the kidney.
n.
The spongy, colorless framework of a red blood corpuscle or other cell.