What is the name meaning of ELWALD. Phrases containing ELWALD
See name meanings and uses of ELWALD!ELWALD
ELWALD
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, British, English
Old Welshman
ELWALD
ELWALD
Boy/Male
Tamil
Boy/Male
Teutonic
Resolute fighter.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by the gates of a medieval walled town. The Middle English singular gate is from the Old English plural, gatu, of geat ‘gate’ (see Yates). Since medieval gates were normally arranged in pairs, fastened in the center, the Old English plural came to function as a singular, and a new Middle English plural ending in -s was formed. In some cases the name may refer specifically to the Sussex place Eastergate (i.e. ‘eastern gate’), known also as Gates in the 13th and 14th centuries, when surnames were being acquired.Americanized spelling of German Götz (see Goetz).Translated form of French Barrière (see Barriere).In New England, Gates was the preferred English version of the name of an extensive French family, called Barrière dit Langevin.
Female
English
English variant spelling of Spanish Dolores, DELORES means "sorrows."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Foulsham, a habitational name from Foulsham in Norfolk, so named from the Old English personal name Fugol + hÄm ‘homestead’.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Pearls
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English bluet ‘blue woolen cloth’ or bleuet ‘cornflower’, perhaps applied as a nickname for a habitual wearer of blue clothes or for someone with blue eyes. Both terms are from Old French bleuet, a diminutive of bleu ‘blue’, a word of Germanic origin (see Blau).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for an idle dreamer, from Middle English cokayne ‘cloud-cuckooland’, name of an imaginary paradise (Old French (pays de) cocaigne, from Middle Low German kÅkenje, a diminutive of kÅke ‘cake’, since in this land the houses were supposed to be made of cake).Americanized spelling of French Cocagne, from an Occitan word meaning ‘profit’, ‘advantage’, used as a personal name from the Middle Ages.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Newbrough in Northumberland, named from Old English nīwe ‘new’ + burh ‘fortification’.English : In some instances, possibly a variant of Newberry.
Boy/Male
Biblical American English Latin
Three, or the third'.
ELWALD
ELWALD
ELWALD
ELWALD
ELWALD