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DIAR

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DIAR

  • Diar |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Diar |

    An expensive wood

  • DIARMAD
  • Male

    Scottish

    DIARMAD

    Scottish Gaelic form of Irish Gaelic Diarmaid, DIARMAD means "without envy."

  • DERMOT
  • Male

    English

    DERMOT

     Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Diarmaid, DERMOT means "without envy."

  • Diarmuid
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Diarmuid

    “”without enemy.”” The name of early kings, legendary heroes and saints, Diarmuid was the lover of Grainne and the most beloved of that warrior band, the Fianna (read the legend). Grainne, as the daughter of Cormac Mac Airt, the High King of Tara, was betrothed to a much older man, the legendary Fionn Mac Cool (read the legend). When Grainne saw Fionn at the wedding banquet she realised he “”was not for her”” and put a a “”geis,”” a spell, on his nephew, Diarmuid, to run away with her. For sixteen years the lovers were forced to roam the countryside, all the time knowing that they were being constantly pursued by the furious Fionn. Each night they made a fresh bed in a sheltered spot and legend has it that these beds can still be seen today in many remote places. (Read the legend of Diarmuid and Grainne).

  • Diarmaid
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, Celtic, Gaelic

    Diarmaid

    Free Man

  • Diarmad
  • Boy/Male

    Gaelic Scottish

    Diarmad

    Free man.

  • Diarmait
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Diarmait

    Free from envy.

  • Diamond
  • Surname or Lastname

    Jewish (Ashkenazic)

    Diamond

    Jewish (Ashkenazic) : Americanized form of a Jewish surname, spelled in various ways, derived from modern German Diamant, Demant ‘diamond’, or Yiddish dime(n)t, going back to Middle High German dīemant (via Latin from Greek adamas ‘unconquerable’, genitive adamantos, a reference to the hardness of the stone). The name is mostly ornamental, one of the many Ashkenazic surnames based on mineral names, though in some cases it may have been adopted by a jeweler.English : variant of Dayman (see Day). Forms with the excrescent d are not found before the 17th century; they are at least in part the result of folk etymology.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Diamáin ‘descendant of Diamán’, earlier Díomá or Déamán, a diminutive of Díoma, itself a pet form of Diarmaid (see McDermott).

  • Kermode
  • Boy/Male

    Celtic

    Kermode

    Son of Diarmaid.

  • Diarmid
  • Boy/Male

    Gaelic

    Diarmid

    Free man.

  • Darby
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Darby

    English : habitational name from the city of Derby, the county seat of Derbyshire, but also from the much smaller place called West Derby in Lancashire. Both are named from Old Norse djúr ‘deer’ + býr ‘farm’, ‘settlement’. The usual spelling of the surname represents the pronunciation of both the place name and the surname.Irish : adopted as an English equivalent of Gaelic Ó Diarmada (or Mac Diarmada) ‘descendant (or ‘son’) of Diarmaid’, a personal name meaning ‘freeman’. See also Dermott, Macdermott. Insofar as Gaelic Ó Duibhdhiormaigh was sometimes reinterpreted as Ó Diarmada, Darby could also be an Anglicization of this name too. The English surname is also established in Ireland, having been taken to County Leix in the 16th century.

  • Grainne Grania
  • Girl/Female

    Irish

    Grainne Grania

    From gran “grain, corn.” Grainne in ancient Ireland was the patron of the harvest. In later legends Grainne was the name of the beautiful daughter of a High King of Ireland, Cormac Mac Art. She had been promised in marriage to the king Fionn Mac Cool (read the legend). When Grainne saw him at the wedding banquet she realised Fionn was too old for her and put a “geis,” a love spell on Fionn’s nephew, Diarmuid. They ran away together but Fionn’s pursuit prevented them from spending two consecutive nights in the same place. Megalithic sites throughout Ireland are still traditionally referred to as “the bed of Grainne and Diarmuid” (read the legend).

  • DERMID
  • Male

    Scottish

    DERMID

    Variant spelling of Scottish Gaelic Diarmad, DERMID means "without envy."

  • Diarmaid
  • Boy/Male

    Irish Gaelic

    Diarmaid

    Free.

  • Dermot Diarmuid
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Dermot Diarmuid

    “”without enemy.”” The name of early kings, legendary heroes and saints, Diarmuid was the lover of Grainne and the most beloved of that warrior band, the Fianna (read the legend). Grainne, as the daughter of Cormac Mac Airt, the High King of Tara, was betrothed to a much older man, the legendary Fionn Mac Cool (read the legend). When Grainne saw Fionn at the wedding banquet she realised he “”was not for her”” and put a a “”geis,”” a spell, on his nephew, Diarmuid, to run away with her. For sixteen years the lovers were forced to roam the countryside, all the time knowing that they were being constantly pursued by the furious Fionn. Each night they made a fresh bed in a sheltered spot and legend has it that these beds can still be seen today in many remote places. (Read the legend of Diarmuid and Grainne).

  • Diar
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim, Pashtun

    Diar

    An Expensive Wood

  • DIARMUID
  • Male

    Gaelic

    DIARMUID

    Early Gaelic form of Irish Diarmaid, DIARMUID means "without envy."

  • Diarmuid
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Irish

    Diarmuid

    Free from Envy

  • KERMIT
  • Male

    English

    KERMIT

    Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Diarmaid, KERMIT means "without envy."

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DIAR

Online names & meanings

  • Ajanabh
  • Boy/Male

    Hindi

    Ajanabh

    Mountain.

  • Coman
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Irish

    Coman

    Noble; Bent

  • Fidelma
  • Girl/Female

    Irish

    Fidelma

    Faithful.

  • Cumming
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, Scottish, and Irish (of Norman origin)

    Cumming

    English, Scottish, and Irish (of Norman origin) : of disputed origin. It may be from a Celtic personal name derived from the element cam ‘bent’, ‘crooked’ (compare Cameron and Campbell). This was relatively frequent in Norfolk, Lincolnshire, and Yorkshire in the 12th and 13th centuries, perhaps as a result of Breton immigration. According to another theory it is a habitational name from Comines near Lille, but there is no evidence for this (no early forms with de have been found). In southern Ireland this Anglo-Norman name has been confused with 2.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Cuimín (or Ó Cuimín) ‘son (or ‘descendant’) of Cuimín’, a personal name formed from a diminutive of cam ‘crooked’.Americanized form of French Canadian Vien, Viens, based on the misconception that these derive from French venire ‘to come’.

  • Tracy
  • Girl/Female

    Greek American French

    Tracy

    Reaper; from Therasia.

  • Frayn
  • Boy/Male

    British, English

    Frayn

    Foreign

  • Tarun | தருண
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Tarun | தருண

    Tie, Connection, Young, Youth, Ageless

  • Jeelan
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim

    Jeelan

    It is a City in Iran

  • Pyrenie
  • Girl/Female

    Greek

    Pyrenie

    Ardent.

  • Carmel
  • Biblical

    Carmel

    circumcised lamb; harvest; full of ears of corn

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DIAR

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DIAR

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DIAR

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Other words and meanings similar to

DIAR

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing DIAR

DIAR

  • Diarrhoetic
  • a.

    Producing diarrhea, or a purging.

  • Diarial
  • a.

    Alt. of Diarian

  • Diary
  • a.

    lasting for one day; as, a diary fever.

  • Diarist
  • n.

    One who keeps a diary.

  • Suppress
  • v. t.

    To stop; to restrain; to arrest the discharges of; as, to suppress a diarrhea, or a hemorrhage.

  • Diarthrodial
  • a.

    Relating to diarthrosis, or movable articulations.

  • Tormentil
  • n.

    A rosaceous herb (Potentilla Tormentilla), the root of which is used as a powerful astringent, and for alleviating gripes, or tormina, in diarrhea.

  • Diarrhea
  • n.

    Alt. of Diarrhoea

  • Diarrheal
  • a.

    Alt. of Diarrhoeal

  • Diarrhoeal
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to diarrhea; like diarrhea.

  • Noctuary
  • n.

    A record of what passes in the night; a nightly journal; -- distinguished from diary.

  • Wrightine
  • n.

    A rare alkaloid found in the bark of an East Indian apocynaceous tree (Wrightia antidysenterica), and extracted as a bitter white crystalline substance. It was formerly used as a remedy for diarrh/a. Called also conessine, and neriine.

  • Scour
  • n.

    Diarrhoea or dysentery among cattle.

  • Diarrhetic
  • a.

    Alt. of Diarrhoetic

  • Purging
  • n.

    The act of cleansing; excessive evacuations; especially, diarrhea.

  • Scour
  • v. i.

    To be purged freely; to have a diarrhoea.

  • Diarian
  • a.

    Pertaining to a diary; daily.

  • Lientery
  • n.

    A diarrhea, in which the food is discharged imperfectly digested, or with but little change.

  • Diary
  • n.

    A register of daily events or transactions; a daily record; a journal; a blank book dated for the record of daily memoranda; as, a diary of the weather; a physician's diary.

  • Diaries
  • pl.

    of Diary