What is the name meaning of US OPERA-SINGER-BE. Phrases containing US OPERA-SINGER-BE
See name meanings and uses of US OPERA-SINGER-BE!US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
Boy/Male
Welsh Latin
ALatin Gerontius, from the Greek 'geron' meaning old. Famous bearer: Welsh opera singer Sir...
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name from Middle English hanger, hangre ‘wood on a steep hillside’, or habitational name from a place named with this word, as for example Hanger in Netley Marsh, Hampshire.
Surname or Lastname
English, Dutch, and German
English, Dutch, and German : occupational name for a retail trader, Middle English manger, monger, Middle Dutch manger, menger, Middle High German mangære, mengære (from Late Latin mango ‘salesman’, with the addition of the Germanic agent suffix).Norwegian : habitational name from a farmstead in southwestern Norway named as Mángr in Old Norse, perhaps from már ‘sea gull’ + angr ‘fjord’.
Girl/Female
American, Australian, Danish, Finnish, German, Scandinavian, Swedish, Teutonic
Guarded by Ing; Ing is Beautiful; Daughter of Hero; Enclosure
Surname or Lastname
Dutch (van Lingen) and German
Dutch (van Lingen) and German : habitational name from Lingen on the Ems river in Lower Saxony, Westphalia, and the former East Prussia.English (Herefordshire) : habitational name from a place in Herefordshire, so named from an old British stream name, Welsh llyn ‘water’ + possibly cain ‘clear’, ‘beautiful’.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Yorkshire) and Irish
English (mainly Yorkshire) and Irish : variant of Pender.South German : variant of Binder ‘cooper’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Sanger 2.
Surname or Lastname
German
German : habitational name for someone from Gingen or Giengen in Württemberg.English : from Middle English gingivere, gyngure, gingere ‘ginger’, hence a metonymic occupational name for a dealer in spices, or possibly a nickname for someone with reddish hair or a fiery temperament.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Monger.
Surname or Lastname
English, German, and Jewish (Ashkenazic)
English, German, and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from Middle English, Middle High German, Yiddish finger (modern German Finger), probably applied as a nickname for a man who had some peculiarity of the fingers, such as possessing a supernumerary one or having lost one or more of them through injury, or for someone who was small in stature or considered insignificant. As a Jewish name, it can also be an ornamental name.
Male
Scandinavian
Scandinavian form of Old Norse Bergr, BIRGER means "rescuer, saver."
Female
Swedish
Swedish contracted form of Scandinavian Ingegerd, INGER means "Ing's enclosure."
Girl/Female
English
Beaver stream, from the beaver meadow. Derived from a surname and place name. Although Beverley...
Female
English
English pet form of Latin Virginia, GINGER means "maiden, virgin." Sometimes also given as a spice name.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : from the Old French personal name Reinger, Rainger, composed of the Germanic elements ragin ‘advice’, ‘counsel’ + gÄr, gÄ“r ‘spear’, ‘lance’.English : occupational name for a maker of rings (see Ring 1) or for a bell ringer, from Middle English ring(en) ‘to ring’, Old English hringan.German : occupational name for a turner, someone who made objects by rotating them on a lathe or wheel.
Boy/Male
German, Norse, Swedish
Guarded by Ing; Ing's Beauty
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a retail trader or a stallholder in a market, Middle English monger, manger (see Manger).
Surname or Lastname
Jewish (Ashkenazic)
Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name for a cantor in a synagogue, from Yiddish zinger ‘singer’.English : variant of Sanger 2, in fact a Middle English recoinage from the verb sing(en) ‘to sing’.German : variant of Sänger (see Sanger 1) in the sense of ‘poet’.Isaac Merrit Singer, inventor of the eponymous sewing machine, was born in 1811 in Pittstown, NY, the son of German immigrant Adam Reisinger. He had five wives and fathered 24 children. Singer, who incorporated his company as the Singer Manufacturing Company in 1864, left a fortune worth $13 million to his various heirs.
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, English, French, Latin, Swedish
Pure; Virgin; Plant whose Red Root is Used as a Spice; Pep; Liveliness; Ginger Plant; Spring-like; Flourishing
Male
German
German form of Latin Bartolomaeus, BARTOLOMÄUS means "son of Talmai."
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
US OPERA-SINGER-BE
n.
An opera glass
n.
The breadth of a finger, or the fourth part of the hand; a measure of nearly an inch; also, the length of finger, a measure in domestic use in the United States, of about four and a half inches or one eighth of a yard.
v. t.
To spend or pass in a lingering manner; -- with out; as, to linger out one's days on a sick bed.
a.
Furnished with hinges.
a.
The first or chief female singer in an opera.
n.
A scene in an opera.
v. t.
To touch with the fingers; to handle; to meddle with.
n.
Skill in the use of the fingers, as in playing upon a musical instrument.
pl.
of I
a.
Of or pertaining to the opera or to operas; characteristic of, or resembling, the opera.
n.
The house where operas are exhibited.
v. i.
To act as a sinner.
n.
One who, or that which, singes.
n.
Comic opera. See Opera Bouffe.
v. i.
To use the fingers in playing on an instrument.
n.
One employed to singe cloth.
n.
The conger eel; -- called also congeree.
imp. & p. p.
of Singe
n.
One who signs or subscribes his name; as, a memorial with a hundred signers.
pron.
The persons speaking, regarded as an object; ourselves; -- the objective case of we. See We.