What is the name meaning of YOTAK. Phrases containing YOTAK
See name meanings and uses of YOTAK!YOTAK
YOTAK
Boy/Male
Hindu
A constellation
Boy/Male
Tamil
A constellation
YOTAK
YOTAK
Boy/Male
Indian
Confidence
Boy/Male
English American Scandinavian
From the land by the highway. The mythological Scandinavian Wayland was a blacksmith with...
Boy/Male
Hindu
Male
Irish
Irish name derived from a place named from cabhán, CAVAN means "hollow."
Boy/Male
Welsh American
Son of Rhys.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Avingha | அவிநà¯à®•ாÂ
Remover of obstacles
Boy/Male
Arabic, Japanese, Malaysian
Muslim Call for Prayer
Surname or Lastname
English
English : status name from Middle English knyghte ‘knight’, Old English cniht ‘boy’, ‘youth’, ‘serving lad’. This word was used as a personal name before the Norman Conquest, and the surname may in part reflect a survival of this. It is also possible that in a few cases it represents a survival of the Old English sense into Middle English, as an occupational name for a domestic servant. In most cases, however, it clearly comes from the more exalted sense that the word achieved in the Middle Ages. In the feudal system introduced by the Normans the word was applied at first to a tenant bound to serve his lord as a mounted soldier. Hence it came to denote a man of some substance, since maintaining horses and armor was an expensive business. As feudal obligations became increasingly converted to monetary payments, the term lost its precise significance and came to denote an honorable estate conferred by the king on men of noble birth who had served him well. Knights in this last sense normally belonged to ancient noble families with distinguished family names of their own, so that the surname is more likely to have been applied to a servant in a knightly house or to someone who had played the part of a knight in a pageant or won the title in some contest of skill.Irish : part translation of Gaelic Mac an Ridire ‘son of the rider or knight’. See also McKnight.
Surname or Lastname
English (Yorkshire)
English (Yorkshire) : occupational name for a person responsible for looking after oxen and castrated horses, from Middle English geld ‘sterile’, ‘barren (animal)’ (Old Norse geldr) + herde ‘herdsman’, Old English hierde (see Heard).Dutch : habitational name from the Dutch province of Gelderland or from Geldern in northwestern Germany (see Geller 1).
Boy/Male
Hindu
Much desired
YOTAK
YOTAK
YOTAK
YOTAK
YOTAK