What is the name meaning of AMENA. Phrases containing AMENA
See name meanings and uses of AMENA!AMENA
AMENA
Male
Egyptian
, self-existent + great.
Male
Egyptian
, a mystical title of the deity Amen Ra.
Male
Egyptian
, an officer in the court of Queen Ameniritis.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Trustworthy faithful, peaceful, honest
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Muslim
God's Swear of Life
Female
Egyptian
, self-existence + life, living + people.
Girl/Female
Indian
Trustworthy, Faithful, Peaceful, Honest
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Celtic, Chinese, Muslim
Honest Woman
Girl/Female
Muslim
Trustworthy, Faithful, Peaceful, Honest
AMENA
AMENA
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : habitational name from any of the many places called Mor(e)ton, named in Old English as ‘settlement (tÅ«n) by or on a marsh or moor (mÅr)’.Swedish : variant of Martin.French : contracted form of Moreton 2.Americanized form of one or more like-sounding Jewish surnames or of various other non-English names bearing some kind of similarity to it.The name Morton was established early in North America. George Morton (1585–1624), one of the Pilgrims, was probably born in Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, England. He and his son Nathaniel (b. 1613 in Leiden, the Netherlands) settled in Plymouth in 1623.
Boy/Male
American, British, English, Gaelic, Irish
Dweller Near a Hollow; Hill Hollow; Variant of Corey Hill Hollow
Girl/Female
Sikh
A vow to a deity, Wish
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived at the edge of a village or by some other boundary, Middle English border, from Old French bordure ‘edge’.
Surname or Lastname
Scottish and English
Scottish and English : topographic name for someone who lived near a mill, Middle English mille, milne (Old English myl(e)n, from Latin molina, a derivative of molere ‘to grind’). It was usually in effect an occupational name for a worker at a mill or for the miller himself. The mill, whether powered by water, wind, or (occasionally) animals, was an important center in every medieval settlement; it was normally operated by an agent of the local landowner, and individual peasants were compelled to come to him to have their grain ground into flour, a proportion of the ground grain being kept by the miller by way of payment.English : from a short form of a personal name, probably female, as for example Millicent.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : a topographic name for someone who lived in a cottage at the lower end of a settlement, from Middle English nether(e) ‘lower’ (Old English neoðera) + cot ‘cottage’, or a habitational name from any of various places named with these elements, as for example Nethercote or Nethercott in Oxfordshire, Nethercote in Warwickshire, or Nethercott in Devon.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English fether ‘feather’, applied as a metonymic occupational name for a trader in feathers and down, a maker of quilts, or possibly a maker of pens. Feathermongers are recorded from the 13th century onwards. In some cases the surname may have arisen from a nickname denoting a very light person or perhaps a person of no account.Americanized form of German Feder.
Female
English
Pet form of French Claudia, CLAUDIE means "lame."
Surname or Lastname
English, Irish (Ulster), Scottish, and Dutch
English, Irish (Ulster), Scottish, and Dutch : name applied either to a Scandinavian or to someone from Normandy in northern France. The Scandinavian adventurers of the Dark Ages called themselves norðmenn ‘men from the North’. Before 1066, Scandinavian settlers in England were already fairly readily absorbed, and Northman and Normann came to be used as bynames and later as personal names, even among the Saxon inhabitants. The term gained a new use from 1066 onwards, when England was settled by invaders from Normandy, who were likewise of Scandinavian origin but by now largely integrated with the native population and speaking a Romance language, retaining only their original Germanic name.French : regional name for someone from Normandy.Dutch : ethnic name for a Norwegian.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant of Nordman.Jewish : Americanized form of some like-sounding Ashkenazic name.Swedish : from norr ‘north’ + man ‘man’.Albert Andriessen Bradt, a settler in Rensselaerswijck on the upper Hudson River in NY, was originally from Norway and was known as de Norrman (‘the Norwegian’). The waterway south of Albany which powered his mills became known as the Normanskill (‘the Norman’s Waterway’), by which name it is still known today.
Girl/Female
Muslim
Collected
AMENA
AMENA
AMENA
AMENA
AMENA
v. t.
To be subject or amenable to; to underlie.
n.
Behavior; bearing.
n.
The quality of being amenable; amenableness.
a.
Liable to be brought to account or punishment; answerable; responsible; accountable; as, amenable to law.
a.
Subject; liable; exposed; answerable; amenable; -- with to.
a.
Liable to punishment, a charge, a claim, etc.
v. t.
To manage.
a.
Easy to be led; governable, as a woman by her husband.
a.
Obliged to answer; liable to be called to account; liable to pay, indemnify, or make good; accountable; amenable; responsible; as, an agent is answerable to his principal; to be answerable for a debt, or for damages.
a.
Liable to respond; likely to be called upon to answer; accountable; answerable; amenable; as, a guardian is responsible to the court for his conduct in the office.
a.
Willing to yield or submit; responsive; tractable.
adv.
In an amenable manner.
n.
The quality or state of being amenable; liability to answer charges; answerableness.
a.
Capable of being controlled, checked, or restrained; amenable to command.
v. t.
To be subject or amenable to.