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LegendaryMyth's Personal Name List
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LegendaryMyth
African/ Egyptian
30
Americas
9
East Asian
53
Germanic / Old Norse
69
Latin / Romance
47
Middle Eastern
167
Pretty Names
31
Slavic / Caucasus
43
Surnames
90
U.K/ Celtic/ Cornish
69
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Almánzar
Derived from Arabic المنظر (al manẓar) meaning "the view" or "the lookout".
Anaya
From the names of a few Spanish towns, possibly of Arabic origin meaning "stagnant water" or "path".
Arora
From the name of the ancient city of Aror in what is now the Sindh province, Pakistan.
Atwood
From Middle English meaning "dweller at the wood".
Babington
Habitational name for someone from Babington in Somerset.
Bačić
Croatian.
Backus
Means "bakery", an occupational name for a baker, from Old English bæchus literally "bake house".
Bellini
From Italian bello meaning "beautiful".
Björnsson
From an Old Norse byname derived from bjǫrn, meaning son of Bjorn- "bear".
Blackwood
From an English place name meaning "black wood".
Bray
From a place name derived from Cornish bre "hill".
Carrasco
Topographic name derived from Spanish carrasca meaning "holm oak".
Ceretti
This surname may denote the original bearer having lived around Turkey Oaks in Tuscany, Italy.
Chastain
From Old French castan "chestnut tree" (Latin castanea), a name for someone who lived near a particular chestnut tree, or possibly a nickname for someone with chestnut-coloured hair.
Cissé
The French-influenced variant of Gambian surname of Mandinka origin, Cissé is used in Mali, Senegal, Ivory Coast and regions of western Africa where French is spoken as a first or second language.
Croft
From Old English croft meaning "enclosed field".
Daddario
Variant of D'Addario. From the given name Addario.
Duxbury
Habitational name from a place in Lancashire, recorded in the early 13th century as D(e)ukesbiri.
Einarsson
Swedish surname, means "son of Einar".
Eklund
From Swedish. Composed of the elements ek "oak" and lund "grove".
Emad
Derived from the given name Imad, means "support, pillar" in Arabic
Farahani
Indicated a person from the county of Farahan in Markazi province, Iran.
Farid
From the given name Farid, means "unique, precious" in Arabic,
Fay
1
Derived from various places named Fay or Faye in northern France, derived from Old French fau "beech tree", from Latin fagus
Fern
Fox
From the name of the animal. It was originally a nickname for a person with red hair or a crafty person.
Gott
Derived from the Old German given name Goda, derived from the element guot meaning "good" or got meaning "god".
Gwynne
Means "white" or "blessed"
Haj
Refers to a person who has participated in the Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia that Muslims must undertake at least once in their lifetimes.
Harrington
From Old English word meaning "hare town"
Hatt
The oldest English surname on record was from East Anglia. An Anglo-Saxon family with the surname Hatt are mentioned in a Norman transcript, and is identified as a pretty regular name in the county.
Hawk
Originally a nickname for a person who had a hawk-like appearance or who acted in a fierce manner, derived from Old English heafoc "hawk".
Helal
Derived from the given name Hilal. Means "crescent moon" in Arabic, also referring to the new moon on the Islamic calendar.
Holt
From Old English, Old Dutch and Old Norse holt meaning "forest".
Hsu
1
Alternate transcription of Chinese Xu, referring to the minor state of Xu, which existed to the 4th century BC in what is now Henan province.
Hunnacott
From Old English hunig "honey" or the given name Huna combined with cot "cottage". This is the name of a small town in Devon, England.
Hunter
Occupational name that referred to someone who hunted for a living, from Old English hunta.
Ikeda
From Japanese 池 (ike) meaning "pool, pond" and 田 (ta) meaning "field".
Isham
The name of a village in Northamptonshire, England from the Celtic name of a local river Ise and the Anglo-Saxon term for a small settlement or homestead -ham.
Isherwood
It's a habitational name thought to come from the name of an unidentified place originating in Lancashire.
Kaur
Means "princess", ultimately from Sanskrit (kumari) meaning "girl".
Kelly
2
From a Scottish place name derived from coille "grove".
Khoo
Kirwan
From Gaelic Ó Ciardhubháin meaning "descendant of Ciardhubhán", a given name composed of the elements ciar "dark" and dubh "black" combined with a diminutive suffix.
Knorr
From a nickname for a gnarly person, derived from Middle High/Low German knorre "knot, protruberance".
Kos
Means "blackbird".
Lamb
A nickname for a gentle or malleable person or an occupational name for someone who raised or cared for young sheep. Can take the form Lum.
Lang
German, Danish and Norwegian cognate of LONG.
Lawrence
Derived from the given name LAURENCE.
Linwood
Originally derived from a place name meaning "stream forest" in Old English.
Lockwood
From an English place name meaning "enclosure forest".
Lorén
A variant of the Spanish personal name Llorente.
Maddrell
The Isle of Man had the highest population of Maddrell families.
Maeda
Magnusson
Means "son of MAGNUS".
Mahdavi
From the given name Mahdi.
Malloch
Reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic MacIain Mhalaich "son of Ian of the bushy eyebrows", which was the family name of the MacGregors of Balhaldie.
Mead
Lived by a meadow, from Middle English
Medvedev
From Russian медведь (medved') meaning "bear".
Mejía
Possibly from a nickname derived from Spanish Mesías meaning "Messiah".
Mekonnen
Ethiopian surname (from given name), meaning 'aristocrat'.
Minett
From the medieval Minna. Means "love" in Old German, specifically medieval courtly love.
Miyamoto
From Japanese 宮 (miya) meaning "temple, shrine, palace" and 本 (moto) meaning "base, root, origin".
Moreno
From a nickname meaning "dark" in Spanish and Portuguese.
Morgenstern
Morning star in German.
Motta
From various names of places around Italy. It is derived from a Gaulish word meaning "hill".
Okorie
From the given name Okoriee. Means "born on Orie" in Igbo, Orie being one of the days of the Igbo week.
Oliveira
Means "olive tree" in Portuguese, ultimately from Latin oliva. It indicated a person who lived near or worked with olive trees.
Orozco
Comes from the Bilbao province in the Basque region of Spain.
Ouyang
From Chinese 歐 (ōu) referring to Mount Sheng in present-day Huzhou, China, combined with 陽 (yáng) meaning "southern face (of a mountain)".
Picot
Norman French
Poirier
French, pear tree
Quek
Hokkien and Teochew romanization of Guo. From Chinese meaning "outer city
Ribeiro
Means "little river, stream" in Portuguese, ultimately from Latin riparius meaning "riverbank".
Romagna
Latin Romania meaning "land of the Romans".
Salamanca
Originally indicated a person from Salamanca, a city in western Spain.
Sallow
Medieval for willow tree
Sanada
From Japanese locational name meaning "field, rice paddy".
Sebeok
From Sebők, a diminutive of Sebestyén.
Seth
Means "merchant, banker" in Hindi, ultimately from Sanskrit श्रेष्ठ (shreshtha) meaning "best, chief, most excellent".
Sheng
From Chinese meaning "flourishing, prosperous", also referring to the ancient state of Sheng which existed during the Zhou dynasty in present-day Shandong province.
Siddall
Siddal. From the name of various English towns, derived from Old English sid "wide" and halh "nook, recess".
Sovin
Derived from Russian сова (sova) meaning "owl". This may have been a nickname for a night person. This is a Russian noble surname.
Stoneking
The name originates in Cornwall,
Sutton
f
&
m
English. From the traditionally English surname meaning "south town".
Vance
Old English, dweller by a fen
Van Kann
Means "from Kanne", a town in the province of Limburg in Belgium. The meaning of the town's name is unknown.
Wildblood
From a medieval nickname for a rakish or hot-headed person.
Wray
From Old Norse vrá meaning "corner, nook"
Ziegenhorn
Upper German (Archaic). Goat horn, either 1. the horn of a goat, 2. Goat mountain, or 3. From goat mountain.