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Whats your name mean?

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7:00 pm, May 2 2008
Posts: 231


EVA
Gender: Feminine

Usage: Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, English, German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Czech, Bulgarian, Slovene, Russian

Pronounced: E-vah (Italian, Spanish), EE-va (English), E-fah (German), AY-vah (Dutch)
Latinate form of EVE, and a variant Russian transcription of YEVA.

I don't have a middle name and my last name isn't there because it originated from China. So, that's all I got folks!

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7:19 pm, May 5 2008
Posts: 14


ROBIN

Gender: Masculine & Feminine

Usage: English

Pronounced: RAH-bin Key
Pet form of ROBERT. Robin Hood was a legendary hero and archer of medieval England who stole from the rich to give to the poor. This name can also be given in reference to the red-breasted bird.

LOL. Just call me Robin Hood. ;D

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8:56 pm, May 5 2008
Posts: 2009


Dan
Meaning:No not Daniel, it comes from Chinese and I forget what it means (not egg)

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RIP
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5:27 am, May 6 2008
Posts: 4917


ZACH

Gender: Masculine

Usage: English

Pronounced: ZAK Key
Short form of ZACHARIAS

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ZACHARIAS

Gender: Masculine

Usage: Biblical

Pronounced: zak-a-RIE-as Key
Greek form of ZECHARIAH. This form of the name is used in most English versions of the New Testament.

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ZECHARIAH

Gender: Masculine

Usage: Biblical

Pronounced: ze-ka-RIE-a Key
From the Hebrew name זְכַרְיָ ה (Zekharyah) which meant "YAHWEH remembers". Zechariah was a minor prophet of the Old Testament, author of the Book of Zechariah. This is also the name of the father of John the Baptist in the New Testament, who was temporarily made dumb because of his disbelief.

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YAHWEH

Gender: Masculine

Usage: Theology

Pronounced: YAH-wah Key
A name of the Hebrew God, represented in Hebrew by the tetragrammaton ("four letters") יהוה (Yod Heh Waw Heh), transliterated into Roman script Y H W H. Because it was considered blasphemous to utter the name of God it was only written and never spoken. This resulted in the original pronunciation being lost. The name may have originally been derived from the old Semitic root הוה (havah) meaning "to be" or "to become".


i went all out, with mine.

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Crikey!
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12:00 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 1308


First name: Can not mention

Gender: Female

Usage: Asian

Meaning: "Like a lotus", have a nick name too which means "cry of a peacock"


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Post #159261 - Reply to (#159233) by BimboSilly
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4:35 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 2009


Quote from BimboSilly
First name: Can not mention

Gender: Female

Usage: Asian

Meaning: "Like a lotus", have a nick name too which means "cry of a peacock"


Asian as in Chinese, Japanese, Korean?

Post #159263
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Local Crack Dealer
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4:43 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 535


First name: Runs with wolves with long pole and heart

Gender: male

Usage: Indi...uhh native american

Meaning: it means...to run with wolves with a long pole...and a heart


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"You just bleed there and think about what you've done!"
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Legen..DARY
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5:43 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 317


TYLER

Gender: Masculine & Feminine

Usage: English

Pronounced: TIE-lur Key
From an occupational surname meaning "tiler of roofs" in Old English.

DAVID

Gender: Masculine

Usage: English, Jewish, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Czech, Slovene, German, Scandinavian, Biblical

Other Scripts: דָוִד (Hebrew), Давид (Russian)

Pronounced: DAY-vid (English), dah-VEED (Hebrew), da-VEED (French), dah-VEET (Russian), DAH-fit (German) Key
Possibly derived from Hebrew דוד (dvd) meaning "beloved". David was the second and greatest of the kings of Israel, ruling in the 10th century BC. Several stories about him are told in the Old Testament, including his defeat of Goliath, a giant Philistine. Jesus was supposedly descended from him.

Famous bearers of this name include the 5th-century patron saint of Wales, two kings of Scotland, empiricist philosopher David Hume, and explorer David Livingstone. This is also the name of the hero of Charles Dickens' semiautobiographical novel 'David Copperfield'.

WRIGHT

Gender: Masculine

Usage: English

Pronounced: RIET Key
From a surname meaning "carpenter" in Old English. Famous bearers of the surname were the Wright brothers, inventors of the first successful airplane, and architect Frank Lloyd Wrigh

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5:48 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 1


KATERINA

Gender: Female

Usage: German

Pronounced: kat-ER-ee-NA
Means "Pure," or "Torture"

Post #159278 - Reply to (#159263) by Keel
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5:53 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 5329


Quote from Keel
First name: Runs with wolves with long pole and heart

Gender: male

Usage: Indi...uhh native american

Meaning: it means...to run with wolves with a long pole...and a heart

...

Navajo, Arapajo, Iroquois, Cherokee, Souix?

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5:53 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 380


ANNA

Gender: Feminine

Usage: English, Italian, German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Finnish, Estonian, Greek, Hungarian, Polish, Russian, Czech, Slovak, Bulgarian, Icelandic, Catalan, Breton, Biblical

Other Scripts: Αννα (Greek), Анна (Russian, Bulgarian)

Pronounced: AN-a (English), AHN-nah (Italian, Dutch, Polish), AH-nah (German, Russian) Key
Latinate form of HANNAH. It appears briefly in the New Testament belonging to a prophetess who recognized Jesus as the Messiah. It was also borne by an 18th-century empress of Russia and by the main character in Tolstoy's 'Anna Karenina', a woman forced to choose between her son and her lover.


Uuuuuhh.......

HANNAH

Gender: Feminine

Usage: English, Jewish, French, German, Biblical

Pronounced: HAN-a (English), HAH-nah (German) Key
From the Hebrew name חַנָּה (Channah) which meant "favour" or "grace". Hannah was the mother of the prophet Samuel in the Old Testament. The Latin version of this name is Anna.

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Will no one scanlate Takahashi Miyuki?! T_T
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5:55 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 909


HAYLEY

Gender: Feminine

Usage: English

Pronounced: HAY-lee Key
From a surname which was originally derived from the name of a town in England (meaning "hay clearing" from Old English heg "hay" and leah "clearing").

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6:14 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 3


HISHAM

Gender: Masculine

Usage: Arabic

Means "generous" in Arabic, ultimately from hashama "to crush". The meaning derives from the traditional Arab act of crushing bread into crumbs in order to share it. This was the name of a 8th-century caliph of the Umayyad dynasty in Spain.



Post #159286
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6:22 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 2342


KENNETH
(I go by Ken though)

Gender: Masculine

Usage: Gaelic, Irish/Scottish (I'm unsure which)

Pronounced: KEN neth
Gaelic: Born of Fire
Irish/Scottish: Handsome

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6:34 pm, May 6 2008
Posts: 12


BRIAN

Gender: Masculine

Usage: Irish, English

Pronounced: BRIE-an Key
The meaning of this name is not known for certain but it is possibly related to the Old Celtic element bre meaning "hill", or by extension "high, noble". Brian Boru was an Irish king who thwarted Viking attempts to conquer Ireland in the 11th century. He was victorious in the Battle of Clontarf, but he himself was slain.

Also another meaning is strong.

I was reading the description part and was thinking, "Hey! thats cool... then slain, well wtf!" dead

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