Search references for MOJCA SENAR. Phrases containing MOJCA SENAR
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MOJCA SENAR
Female
Croatian
, bitter.
Surname or Lastname
English (Yorkshire)
English (Yorkshire) : metronymic from the medieval personal name Mag(ge), a reduced form of Margaret (see Margeson); but in some cases a patronymic from the Old English personal name Mocca.
Surname or Lastname
English (Devon)
English (Devon) : from the rare Old English masculine personal name Mocca, which may be related to a Germanic stem mokk- ‘to accumulate’, ‘to be heaped up’, and hence may originally have been a nickname for a heavy, thickset person. Alternatively, it could be from Middle English mokke ‘trick’, ‘joke’, ‘jest’, ‘act of jeering’, a derivative of mokke(n) ‘to mock’, from Old French moquer.German : variant of Maag.German : nickname for a short, thickset man, Middle High German mocke.Dutch : nickname from Middle Dutch mocke ‘dirty or wanton woman’, ‘slut’, or from West Flemish mokke ‘fat child’.
Girl/Female
Irish
Wise.
MOJCA SENAR
MOJCA SENAR
Boy/Male
Latin Dutch
Fortunate; good.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the various places, for example in Hertfordshire, Kent, and Somerset, so named from Old English strǣt ‘paved highway’, ‘Roman road’ (Latin strata (via)). In the Middle Ages the word at first denoted a Roman road but later also came to denote the main street in a town or village, and so the surname may also have been a topographic name for someone who lived on a main street.Jewish : Americanized form of the Sephardic surname Chetrit, of uncertain origin.Americanized form of Ashkenazic Jewish Strasser and a number of other similar surnames.The Rev. Nicholas Street (1603–74) came from England to Taunton, MA, between 1630 and 1638, and later moved to New Haven, CT, where his descendant Augustus Russell Street, a leader in art education, was born in 1791 and went on to become one of the most important early benefactors of Yale College.
Surname or Lastname
English (common in Lancashire and northern Ireland)
English (common in Lancashire and northern Ireland) : from a patronymic or pet form of Topp, or possibly from an unattested Old English personal name Topping.
Male
Italian
Italian and Spanish form of Roman Cyriacus, CIRIACO means "of the lord."
Boy/Male
Arabic
Noble; Illustrious
Boy/Male
Biblical
That cuts or divides; a nail; a gryphon; a horseman.
Girl/Female
Hebrew
Eternal joy.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, French, German, Latin
Patrician; Noble; Form of Patrick
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Holy; Pure
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Prince; Saint; King; Friend of the City
MOJCA SENAR
MOJCA SENAR
MOJCA SENAR
MOJCA SENAR
MOJCA SENAR
a.
Of six; belonging to six; containing six.