What is the name meaning of AGNES. Phrases containing AGNES
See name meanings and uses of AGNES!AGNES
AGNES
Girl/Female
English American
or Agnes.
Girl/Female
English
or Agnes.
Girl/Female
Greek American
Poor, poor, or chaste. St. Agnes was a 3rd century Christian martyr whose January 21st feast day...
Female
Russian
(ÐгнеÌÑÑа) Russian form of Greek Hagne, AGNESSA means "chaste; holy."
Girl/Female
Greek
Greek Agnes,Poor, pure, or chaste. St. Agnes was a 3rd century Christian martyr whose January...
Girl/Female
English
or Agnes.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English female personal name Annes, Old French Anes, vernacular form of Late Latin Agnes, which is in turn an adaptation of the Greek name Hagnē ‘pure’, ‘holy’. St. Agnes was a virgin martyr, one of those who suffered under the persecutions of Diocletian in 303 ad. Her name was associated by folk etymology with Latin agnus ‘lamb’, and in medieval art she is often depicted with a lamb (the lamb of God).
Female
English
English form of French Agnès, AGNES means "chaste; holy."
Girl/Female
Greek Scottish
Poor, pure, or chaste. St. Agnes was a 3rd century Christian martyr whose January 21st feast day...
Girl/Female
English Greek
or Agnes.
Surname or Lastname
English (found mainly in Yorkshire)
English (found mainly in Yorkshire) : patronymic from one of several Middle English personal names. Reaney and Wilson have it as ‘son of Hann’ or ‘son of Hand’. Bardsley explains it as ‘son of Anne’, but Anne was not common as a Middle English personal name, although this is very probably the sense of the Scottish surname Anisoun. More plausible in a medieval context, perhaps, is ‘son of Agnes’ (see Annis), or even ‘son of Anselm’.
Girl/Female
English
or Agnes.
Female
Italian
Italian and Latvian form of Greek Hagne, AGNESE means "chaste; holy."
Girl/Female
Greek
Poor, pure, or chaste. St. Agnes was a 3rd century Christian martyr whose January 21st feast day...
Surname or Lastname
Scandinavian (especially Norwegian), Scottish, and northern English
Scandinavian (especially Norwegian), Scottish, and northern English : topographic name for someone who lived on a headland or promontory, Old Norse nes, or a habitational name from any of the numerous places named with this word; there are over a hundred farms in Norway and many settlements in Scotland and northern England so namedEnglish : according to Reaney and Wilson, a variant of Nash.German : habitational name from places called Nesse in Oldenburg and Friesland.German : from a short form of the female personal name Agnes (see Agnes 1).
Girl/Female
Scottish
Backward spelling of Agnes: pure; chaste.
Female
Russian
Variant spelling of Russian Agnessa, AGNESSE means "chaste; holy."
Girl/Female
Greek American Spanish
Poor, pure, or chaste. St. Agnes was a 3rd century Christian martyr whose January 21st feast day...
Girl/Female
English
or Agnes.
Girl/Female
English
or Agnes.
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n.
A certain curve of the third order, described by Maria Agnesi under the name versiera.