Search references for CSS SPRAY. Phrases containing CSS SPRAY
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The CSS Spray was a steam-powered, side-paddle wheel tugboat built in New Albany, Indiana originally fitted as a mercantile ship before becoming a gunboat
CSS_Spray
American Civil War Confederate ironclad warship
CSS Georgia, also known as State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram, was an ironclad warship built in Savannah, Georgia in 1862 during the American Civil War
CSS_Georgia_(1863)
Submarine of the Confederate States of America
H. L. Hunley, also known as the Hunley, CSS H. L. Hunley, or CSS Hunley, was a submarine of the Confederate States of America that fought in the American
H._L._Hunley
Confederate States Navy ship
CSS Florida was a sloop-of-war in the service of the Confederate States Navy. She served as a commerce raider during the American Civil War before being
CSS_Florida_(cruiser)
Ironclad of the Confederate States Navy
CSS Richmond was the name ship of her class of six casemate ironclads built for the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Completed during
CSS_Richmond
1862 Confederate ironclad ship
CSS Palmetto State was one of six Richmond class casemate ironclad rams built for the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Completed
CSS_Palmetto_State
Confederate river warship of American Civil War
CSS Muscogee was an casemate ironclad built in Columbus, Georgia for the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Her original paddle configuration
CSS_Muscogee
Confederate Navy warship
CSS Shenandoah, formerly Sea King and later El Majidi, was an iron-framed, teak-planked, full-rigged sailing ship with auxiliary steam power chiefly known
CSS_Shenandoah
Confederate States Navy ironclad
CSS Albemarle was a steam-powered casemate ironclad ram of the Confederate Navy (and later the second Albemarle of the United States Navy), named for
CSS_Albemarle
Confederate ironclad
CSS Neuse (/nuːs/ NOOSE) was a steam-powered ironclad ram of the Confederate States Navy that served in the latter part the American Civil War and was
CSS_Neuse
CSS Charleston was a casemate ironclad ram built for the Confederate Navy (CSN) at Charleston, South Carolina during the American Civil War. Funded by
CSS_Charleston
1859 gunboat of the Confederate States Navy
CSS Patrick Henry was a ship built in New York City in 1859 by the renowned William H. Webb for the Old Dominion Steam Ship Line as the civilian steamer
CSS_Patrick_Henry
Sloop-of-war of the United States Navy
recovering this invaluable prize that the Confederate ironclad rams CSS Chicora and CSS Palmetto State slipped out of the main ship channel of Charleston
USS_Housatonic_(1861)
CSS Gaines was a wooden side wheel gunboat, weighing 863 tons, constructed by the Confederates at Mobile, Alabama, during 1861–62. The ship was hastily
CSS_Gaines
1865 CSS Sea Bird, side-wheel river steamer, sunk: February 10, 1862 CSS Selma, side-wheel river steamer, captured: August 5, 1864 CSS Spray, steam
List of ships of the Confederate States Navy
List_of_ships_of_the_Confederate_States_Navy
Confederate States Navy ship
CSS Alabama was a screw sloop-of-war built in 1862 for the Confederate States Navy. She was built in Birkenhead on the River Mersey opposite Liverpool
CSS_Alabama
Confederate States Navy gunboat
CSS Chattahoochee was a twin-screw steam powered gunboat built at Saffold, Georgia; she was christened for the river upon which she was built. The gunboat
CSS_Chattahoochee
Confederate States Navy's unnamed casemate ironclad
CSS Wilmington was an unnamed casemate ironclad built for the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. The ship was never officially named
CSS_Wilmington
CSS Chicora was a Confederate ironclad ram that fought in the American Civil War. It was built under contract at Charleston, South Carolina in 1862. James
CSS_Chicora
CSS Columbia was an ironclad steamer ram in the Confederate States Navy and later in the United States Navy. Columbia was built at Charleston, South Carolina
CSS_Columbia
Confederate States of America gunboat
The CSS Peedee, also known as the CSS Pee Dee was a Confederate gunboat launched in January 1865 and scuttled the following month during the American
CSS_Peedee
Confederate Navy steam-powered ironclad ship
CSS Virginia II was a Confederate Navy steam-powered ironclad ram laid down in 1862 at the William Graves' shipyard in Richmond, Virginia. Acting Constructor
CSS_Virginia_II
1863 American Confederate wooden gunboat
CSS Isondiga was a wooden gunboat that served in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Designed according to Matthew Fontaine Maury's
CSS_Isondiga
CSS Resolute was a tugboat built in 1858 at Savannah Georgia as the Ajax which served in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Resolute
CSS_Resolute
Confederate steamer ship, CSS Arctic
CSS Arctic was a Confederate ironclad floating battery converted from USS Arctic at Wilmington, North Carolina in 1862. Confederate forces seized USS
CSS_Arctic
Confederate ironclad warship
CSS Tuscaloosa was an ironclad warship that served in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Construction began in May 1862, under
CSS_Tuscaloosa_(ironclad)
1864 naval skirmish in the American Civil War
a vessel in a Brazilian harbor. In late 1864, the nine gun sloop-of-war CSS Florida with 146 officers and crew headed south along the South American
Bahia_incident
CSS Huntsville was a Confederate ironclad floating battery built at Selma, Alabama, from 1862 to 1863 during the American Civil War. Huntsville was ordered
CSS_Huntsville
American Civil War Confederate ironclad
CSS Fredericksburg was a casemate ironclad that served as part of the James River Squadron of the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War
CSS_Fredericksburg
Gunboat of the United States Navy
horse marines; some may have previously seen action on the ironclad warship CSS Arkansas. Forrest's artillery commander, Captain John W. Morton, had previously
USS_Undine_(1863)
Warship
CSS Chickamauga, originally the blockade runner Edith, was purchased by the Confederate States Navy at Wilmington, North Carolina, in September 1864.
CSS_Chickamauga
Confederate States Navy steamboat (1861–1865)
CSS Raleigh was originally a small, iron-hulled, propeller-driven towing steamer operating on the Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal. She was taken over by
CSS_Raleigh_(1861)
American Mississippi steamboat, sank 1865
explosion. Other vessels joined the rescue, including the steamers Silver Spray, Jenny Lind, and Pocahontas, the navy ironclad USS Essex and the sidewheel
Sultana_(steamboat)
CSS Phoenix was a Confederate ironclad floating battery built at Selma, Alabama, from 1863 to 1864. Phoenix was built at the Confederate Naval Works at
CSS_Phoenix
Iron-hull gunboat of the American Civil War
The CSS Beaufort (/ˈbjuːfərt/ BEW-fert) was an iron-hull gunboat that served in North Carolina and Virginia during the American Civil War. Originally
CSS_Beaufort
Sidewheel steamship
Republic was a sidewheel steamship, originally named SS Tennessee (also named CSS Tennessee, USS Tennessee, and USS Mobile for a time), lost in a hurricane
SS_Republic_(1853)
Schooner
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Grafton_(ship)
CSS Savannah was a Richmond-class casemate ironclad in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Savannah was built by H. F. Willink
CSS_Savannah_(ironclad)
Ironclad gunboat built by the Confederate States Navy in 1863
CSS North Carolina was a casemate ironclad built for the Confederate Navy in 1863 during the American Civil War by Berry & Brothers at Wilmington, North
CSS_North_Carolina
CSS Webb, a 655-ton side-wheel steam ram, was originally built in New York City in 1856 as the civilian steamship William H. Webb. She received a Confederate
CSS_Webb
United States historic place
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
Bertrand_(steamboat)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Eastport_(1862)
United States Navy ironclad ship
in combat occurred when she was struck by a spar torpedo carried by the CSS David. Eight crewmen were awarded the Medal of Honor for their actions during
USS_New_Ironsides
CSS Bombshell — believed to have been an Erie Canal steamer — was a U.S. Army transport. Bombshell was sunk by the Confederate batteries in Albemarle
CSS_Bombshell
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
John_Bowes_(steamship)
CSS Drewry was a gunboat of the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. This wooden gunboat had a foredeck protected by an iron V-shaped
CSS_Drewry
1864 passenger steamboat
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
SS_Tararua
Armoured sloop from UK
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
HMS_Enterprise_(1864)
Frigate of the Royal Navy
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
HMS_Terrible_(1845)
Great Lakes schooner wrecked in Lake Michigan
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Alvin_Clark_(schooner)
Steam operated tugboat purchased by the US Navy
Carolina. The Union ships destroyed the fort and batteries, captured CSS Ellis, sank CSS Seabird, and forced the burning of three other Southern ships to
USS_Shawsheen
Scottish sailing vessel
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Invercauld_(ship)
19th-century Danish sailing ship
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
HDMS_Dannebrog
United States historic place
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Maple_Leaf_(shipwreck)
US Navy gunboat
the Confederate States Navy, and subsequently was taken into that Navy as CSS Water Witch. Water Witch was launched by the Washington Navy Yard in 1851
USS_Water_Witch_(1851)
Squib-class torpedo boat procured late in 1864 by the Confederate States Navy
CSS Scorpion was a Squib-class torpedo boat that served in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Armed with a single spar torpedo
CSS_Scorpion
Neosho-class monitor
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
USS_Osage_(1863)
CSS Raleigh was a steam-powered Civil War casemate ironclad. She was fitted with a spar torpedo instead of an iron ram and was built in 1863–1864 by the
CSS_Raleigh_(1864)
Place in Florida, United States
solved the situation by ordering a 100-foot steam tugboat named Spray, later the CSS Spray. Ladd used this craft to tow vessels into and out of Newport.
Newport,_Florida
US Navy side-wheel steamer in service 1862-1864
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Columbine_(1862)
Side wheel paddle steamer
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
City_of_Dunedin_(ship)
Sloop of the Royal Navy
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
HMS_Research_(1863)
Confederate schooner and blockade runner
CSS Rob Roy was a Confederate blockade runner commanded by Captain William Watson, that ran to and from Bermuda, the Bahamas and Cuba from 1862 to 1864
CSS_Rob_Roy
American paddle steamer (1850–1865)
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
Brother_Jonathan_(steamer)
Lead ship of Milwaukee-class
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
USS_Milwaukee_(1864)
1862 Passaic-class ironclad monitor
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
USS_Patapsco_(1862)
American package freighter
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
SS_Lac_La_Belle
Screw frigate in the US Navy famous for her role in the Trent Affair of 1861
Point and entered Hampton Roads. Under the ironclad's protection, CSS Jamestown and CSS Raleigh approached the Hampton shore and captured three small Union
USS_San_Jacinto_(1850)
CSS Hampton was a wooden gunboat of the Confederate States Navy, one of the few Hampton class gunboats to be built. Hampton was built at Norfolk Naval
CSS_Hampton
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Lottie_Sleigh
Boat converted by the navy into 572-ton river gunboat
Conestoga's first combat action took place in September 1861, when she engaged CSS Jackson near Lucas Bend, Kentucky. Other skirmishes punctuated the routine
USS_Conestoga_(1861)
due to his familial connections with Maine. During the war, his Spray became the CSS Spray and was put into duty as a gunboat. The war cost him an estimated
Daniel_Ladd
CSS Indian Chief was used as receiving ship at Charleston, South Carolina, from 1862 to 1865. One of her additional details in 1863 was support of the
CSS_Indian_Chief
1844 clippership
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Houqua_(clipper)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
USS_Harvest_Moon
Sailing frigate of the United States Navy
anchored near Fort Monroe, her most conspicuous absence coming in the wake of CSS Virginia's attempt to break the Union blockade early in the spring of 1862
USS_Brandywine
Gunboat of the United States Navy
which could be held. On 13 September 1861, with Savannah, Louisiana engaged CSS Patrick Henry off Newport News, Virginia, but shot from both sides fell short
USS_Louisiana_(1861)
Sidewheel, American Civil War
effective naval force. During the battle, Monarch rammed the cottonclad rams CSS Colonel Lovell and General Beauregard. The Union forces took Memphis, Tennessee
USS_Monarch
Gunboat of the United States Navy
American Civil War. She was sunk in action against the Confederate ironclad ram CSS Albemarle during the Battle of Plymouth (1864). Southfield was built in 1857
USS_Southfield
Canonicus-class monitor
in the battle. She and her sister Manhattan were to keep the ironclad ram CSS Tennessee away from the vulnerable wooden ships while they were passing Fort
USS_Tecumseh_(1863)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Violet
Gunboat of the United States Navy
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
USS_Jacob_Bell
Gunboat of the United States Navy
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
USS_Bloomer
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Peterhoff
Gunboat of the United States Navy
sloop-of-war in the United States Navy. During the Civil War, she destroyed the CSS Governor Moore and served in blockade operations. She was attached to the
USS_Oneida_(1861)
East India Company ship
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
HCS_Hugh_Lindsay
1851 American extreme clipper
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
Comet_(clipper)
Imperial Russian Navy's monitor
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
Russian_monitor_Smerch
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Annie
Spanish Navy screw frigate of 1862–1864
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Spanish frigate Nuestra Señora del Triunfo
Spanish_frigate_Nuestra_Señora_del_Triunfo
Steamer gunboat (in service 1861–1864)
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Underwriter_(1852)
1824 English brig
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
Grecian_(1824_ship)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Philippi
command. Dai Ching joined in the search for the Confederate States Navy raider CSS Tacony in the North Atlantic Ocean off the northeastern coast of the United
USS_Dai_Ching
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_Narcissus_(1863)
Civil War gunboat
aftermath of the Confederate surrender, Mound City captured the Rebel steamer CSS Red Rover, which had been used for accommodating the crew of the floating
USS_Mound_City
Civil War era gunboat
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
USS_St._Clair
Steamship operated by the Launceston and Melbourne Steam Navigation Company
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
SS_City_of_Launceston
Privateering vessel
Sep: CSS North Carolina 7 Oct: USS Aster 27 Oct: CSS Albemarle 4 Nov: USS Elfin 4 Nov: USS Key West 4 Nov: USS Tawah 4 Nov: USS Undine 5 Nov: CSS Spray 11
J._M._Chapman
Package freighter that served ports on the Upper Great Lakes
2 Mar: CSS Rob Roy 12 Mar: Althea 14 Mar: CSS Neuse 28 Mar: Milwaukee 29 Mar: Osage Mar: CSS Spray 1 Apr: Bertrand 1 Apr: Rodolph 3 Apr: CSS Beaufort
SS_Pewabic
CSS SPRAY
CSS SPRAY
Boy/Male
Greek
Order.
Girl/Female
English
Diminutive of any name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel, Christian, or Christopher.....
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the medieval female personal name Cass, a short form of Cassandra. This was the name (of uncertain, possibly non-Greek, origin) of an ill-fated Trojan prophetess of classical legend, condemned to foretell the future but never be believed; her story was well known and widely popular in medieval England.
Boy/Male
Welsh
Legendary son of Seidi.
Boy/Male
Australian, Farsi, Irish, Latin
Vain; He who Guards the Treasure; Curly-headed
Boy/Male
Arthurian Legend
Name of a king.
Female
English
Short form of English Cissy, CISS means "blind."
Male
Hungarian
Hungarian form of Greek Loukas, LUKÃCS means "from Lucania."
Boy/Male
English Latin Irish Welsh
Wealthy man.
Girl/Female
English
Cassandra was a Trojan prophetess, daughter of King Priam. A diminutive of Casirnir, Cassandra,...
Girl/Female
British, Christian, English
Diminutive of Christie or Any Name Beginning with Christ
Boy/Male
English Biblical
Diminutives of any masculine or feminine name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel,...
Female
English
English short form of Latin Cassandra, CASS means "she who entangles men."Â
Girl/Female
English
Diminutive of any name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel, Christian, or Christopher.....
Female
English
Short form of English Cissy, CIS means "blind."
Boy/Male
English
Diminutives of any masculine or feminine name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel,...
Biblical
same as Kish
Girl/Female
British, English
Happy
Male
Scottish
Scottish Gaelic form of Latin Lucas, LÙCAS means "from Lucania."Â
Boy/Male
Australian, Celtic, Irish, Netherlands, Welsh
Curly-haired; Lover; Loving Person; Legendary Son of Seidi
CSS SPRAY
CSS SPRAY
Male
Yiddish
(הֶערשֶ×על) Pet form of Yiddish Hirsh, HIRSHEL means "deer."
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Hayley, HAILEE means "hay field."
Girl/Female
Tamil
Ekta | à®à®•தா, à®à®•தா
Unity
Girl/Female
Hindu
Goddess of wealth (Krishna's father, husband of Devaki.)
Girl/Female
Latin
Dark.
Girl/Female
African, Australian, Czechoslovakian, Finnish, Latin, Slovenia, Swahili
Skillful; Birthday; Resurrection
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational and topographic name for someone who lived or worked in a forest (see Forrest).English : Norman French nickname or occupational name from Old French forcetier ‘cutter’, an agent noun from forcettes ‘scissors’.English : occupational name, by metathesis, from Old French fust(r)ier ‘blockmaker’ (a derivative of fustre ‘block of wood’).German (Förster) : occupational and topographic name for someone who lived and worked in a forest (see Forst).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : ornamental name from German Forst ‘forest’.
Girl/Female
Indian
Jewels
Surname or Lastname
Polish
Polish : from the personal name Lew ‘lion’, adopted as a translation of Leon (see Lyon 2).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant spelling of Lev.English : topographic name for someone who lived by a hill or burial-mound, Old English hlǣw, or a habitational name from Lew in Oxfordshire, named with this word.Chinese : variant of Liu 1.
Boy/Male
Biblical, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Swedish
The Lord is My God
CSS SPRAY
CSS SPRAY
CSS SPRAY
CSS SPRAY
CSS SPRAY
pl.
of Inadvertence
v. i.
To cease; to neglect.
v. t.
To rate; to tax; to assess.
n.
A tax; an assessment. See Cess.
n.
A wild ass, especially the koulan.
n.
The wild ass of Persia.
n.
The state of being health/ess.
n.
A thing (only in phrase below).
n.
To prophesy; to presage.
n.
A quadruped of the genus Equus (E. asinus), smaller than the horse, and having a peculiarly harsh bray and long ears. The tame or domestic ass is patient, slow, and sure-footed, and has become the type of obstinacy and stupidity. There are several species of wild asses which are swift-footed.
n.
The male ass; a donkey.
n.
A Hindoo measure of distance, varying from one and a half to two English miles.
imp. & p. p.
of Cess
n.
One that brays like an ass.
n.
Bound; measure.
n.
A rate or tax.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Cess
v. t.
To render useless or void; to annul; to reject; to send away.