What is the name meaning of DAUGHTERS. Phrases containing DAUGHTERS
See name meanings and uses of DAUGHTERS!DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
Girl/Female
Arabic Hebrew
Little dove. In the bible one of Job's three daughters known as the most beautiful women of their...
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Daughter (see Daughters).
Girl/Female
Latin
or Selena. One of seven mythological daughters of Atlas transformed by Zeus into stars of the...
Girl/Female
Indian
Beautiful one of the daughters of Adam as
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a Norman personal name, Filimor, composed of the Germanic elements filu ‘very’ + mÄri, mÄ“ri ‘famous’.The home of the main English branch of the Fillmore family in Tudor times was East Sutton, Kent, but the immigrant John Fillmore (1678–c.1710) was a mariner who came from Manchester, England, to Ipswich,MA, in about 1700. His son, also called John Fillmore (1702–77), had seven sons and three daughters. One of these sons, Nathaniel, was the father of President Millard Fillmore (1800–74).
Girl/Female
Indian
It is the name of one of the daughters of the prophet, It means one who Allah loves
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English, Old English dohtor ‘daughter’. The application is unclear; perhaps it was a surname acquired by the retainers of an heiress of an important family.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly West Midlands)
English (mainly West Midlands) : from Middle English pr(i)est ‘minister of the Church’ (Old English prēost, from Latin presbyter, Greek presbyteros ‘elder’, ‘counselor’, comparative of presbys ‘old man’), used as a nickname, either for someone with a pious manner or possibly for someone who had played the part of a priest in a pageant. It may also have been an occupational name for someone in the service of a priest, and occasionally it may have been used to denote someone suspected of being the son of a priest.A John Priest is recorded as being in Woburn, MA, as early as 1675. The Mayflower Pilgrim Digory Priest of Holland died the first winter at Plymouth in 1620, leaving behind a widow who remarried and two daughters, who did not pass on the family name.
Girl/Female
Hebrew American
Dove. Little dove. In the Old Testament, Jemima was one of the three beautiful daughters of Job...
Girl/Female
Biblical
The tents of daughters; or young women; or prostitutes.
Girl/Female
Latin
or Selena. One of seven mythological daughters of Atlas transformed by Zeus into stars of the...
Girl/Female
Latin
or Selena. One of seven mythological daughters of Atlas transformed by Zeus into stars of the...
Girl/Female
Muslim
It is the name of one of the daughters of the prophet, It means one who Allah loves
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a clump of bushes or by a patch of bracken. Brake ‘thicket’ and brake ‘bracken’ were homonyms in Middle English. The first is from Old English bracu; the second is by folk etymology from northern Middle English braken, -en being taken as a plural ending. After the words had fallen together, their senses also became confused.North German : habitational name from any of several places so named, notably the town on the Weser, or a topographic name from Middle Low German brÄk ‘clearing’, ‘coppice’.Wilhelm Joseph Dietrich, Baron von Brake, of Hannover (Germany), is said to have settled in Nansemond, VA, about 1730. His son Johann Jacob (John) Brake was the progenitor of the VA and WV Brakes; another son, also named Jacob Brake, settled in Edgecombe Co., NC, in 1742, where he sired seven sons and two daughters.
Girl/Female
Hebrew
Cassia; sweet-scented spice. Keziah was one of Job's three fair daughters in the bible. This name...
Surname or Lastname
North German
North German : occupational name for a peddler (see Haack 1).North German : topographic name for someone who lived by a hedge (see Heck 2).North German : perhaps also a topographic name from hach, hack ‘dirty, boggy water’.Frisian, Dutch, and North German : from a Frisian personal name, Hake.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : metonymic occupational name from Yiddish hak ‘axe’.English : variant of Hake 1.George Hack (c. 1623–c. 1665) was born in Cologne, Germany, of a Schleswig-Holstein family, and emigrated to New Amsterdam where he practiced medicine and entered the VA tobacco trade. Colony records show that he and his wife, Anna, were formally made naturalized citizens of VA in 1658. He had two daughters, neither of whom married, and two sons: George Nicholas Hack, the founder of the Norfolk branch of the family; and Peter, for many years a member of the VA House of Burgesses, the founder of the Maryland branch. Hack’s descendants eventually changed the spelling of the name to Heck.
Girl/Female
Arabic American Biblical Hebrew
Little dove. In the bible one of Job's three daughters known as the most beautiful women of their...
Girl/Female
Muslim
Beautiful one of the daughters of Adam as
Girl/Female
Indian
Little dove. in the bible one of jobs three daughters known as the most beautiful women of their time: the other two were keziah and keren
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Lancashire, so named from Old English gor ‘dirt’, ‘mud’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.Introduced in America by a family from Gorton, Lancashire, England (three miles from Manchester), the name Gorton was also adopted by a religious group known as the Gortonites. They were followers of Samuel Gorton (c. 1592–1677), whose unorthodox religious beliefs, which included denying the doctrine of the Trinity, caused him to seek religious toleration by emigrating to Boston in 1637 with his family. In conflict with authorities in Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, and Newport, he eventually settled in Shawomet, RI, and renamed it Warwick. He died there in 1677, leaving three sons and at least six daughters.
DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
DAUGHTERS
pl.
of Daughter-in-law
n. pl.
The seven daughters of Atlas and the nymph Pleione, fabled to have been made by Jupiter a constellation in the sky.
n. pl.
The Pleiades or seven stars, fabled to have been the daughters of Atlas.
n.
A title borne by every one of the daughters of the kings of Spain and Portugal, except the eldest.
n. pl.
Daughters.
n.
A blending of property for equality of division, as when lands given in frank-marriage to one daughter were, after the death of the ancestor, blended with the lands descending to her and to her sisters from the same ancestor, and then divided in equal portions among all the daughters. In modern usage, a mixing together, or throwing into a common mass or stock, of the estate left by a person deceased and the amounts advanced to any particular child or children, for the purpose of a more equal division, or of equalizing the shares of all the children; the property advanced being accounted for at its value when given.
n. pl.
Daughters.
pl.
of Daughter
n.
In old English and in Scots law, a fine paid to the lord of the soil by a tenant upon the marriage of one the tenant's daughters.
n. pl.
The daughters of Hesperus, or Night (brother of Atlas), and fabled possessors of a garden producing golden apples, in Africa, at the western extremity of the known world. To slay the guarding dragon and get some of these apples was one of the labors of Hercules. Called also Atlantides.
n.
A sea nymph, one of the daughters of Nereus, who were attendants upon Neptune, and were represented as riding on sea horses, sometimes with the human form entire, and sometimes with the tail of a fish.