What is the name meaning of HALLI. Phrases containing HALLI
See name meanings and uses of HALLI!HALLI
HALLI
Boy/Male
Hebrew
Flute.
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, British, English
Lives by the Holy Spring; Holy Well
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Christian, Danish, English, German, Greek, Norse, Teutonic
Heroine; Hay Meadow; Praise the Lord; From the Hall; Thinking of the Sea; Army Power
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Hayley, HALLIE means "hay field."
Surname or Lastname
English (Gloucestershire)
English (Gloucestershire) : habitational name from Hawling in Gloucestershire or possibly from Halling in Kent. Halling was named in Old English as ‘family or followers of a man called Heall’; Hawling may have the same etymology or it may have meant ‘people from Hallow’ (a place in Worcestershire named in Old English with halh + haga ‘enclosure’), or ‘people at the nook of land’, Old English halh (see Hale 1).German : variant of Häling (see Haling).
Girl/Female
English American Teutonic
From the Hall.
Girl/Female
Australian, British, English, Greek
Cute
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name, most probably from a place in Dorset, named from Old English hǣl ‘omen’ + well(a) ‘spring’, ‘stream’; the reference is presumably to pagan river worship. Two minor places with this name in Devon are probably named as ‘elder-tree spring’, from Old English ellern ‘elder tree’ + well(a). The surname is now found chiefly in the West Midlands. Compare Halliwell.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of numerous places named with Old English hÄlig ‘holy’ + well(a) ‘well’, ‘spring’, such as Holwell in Dorset and Oxfordshire. (Reaney suggests it could also have been a topographic name with the same etymological origin.) However, the present-day concentration of the name in Northamptonshire would suggest that Holwell in Leicestershire, which has a different etymology, from Old English hol ‘hollow’ + wella, was most likely the primary source of this form of the surname. There is also a Holwell in Hertfordshire of the same derivation, as well as places called Halwill and Halwell in Devon, Holywell in Cambridgeshire, Cornwall, Clwyd, and Northumberland, and Halliwell near Manchester, all of which could have contributed to the surname.
Boy/Male
English
Lives by the holy spring.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Healing in northeastern Lincolnshire, named in Old English as ‘(settlement of) the family or followers of Hægel’ (an unattested Old English personal name).English : variant of Hillian.German and Dutch : nickname from Middle Low German hellin, Middle Dutch hellinc, hallinc ‘halfpenny’. Compare Helbling.German : habitational name from any of various places named Helling or Hellingen.
HALLI
HALLI
Boy/Male
Scandinavian
Girl/Female
British, English
Meadow of Grass
Girl/Female
Indian
Name of a mountain
Boy/Male
Irish Scottish Celtic
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Lord Vishnu
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi
Charioteer of Krishna; Tree
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Lord Saibaba and Shiv
Girl/Female
American, British, Christian, English, Finnish, Japanese, Latin
Adorable; Lovable; She who Must be Loved
Girl/Female
Spanish
Feminine of Stephan.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
One who has Attained the Absolute
HALLI
HALLI
HALLI
HALLI
HALLI
n.
Same as Halidom.
v. i.
That which gives out a grave or monotonous tone or dull sound; as: (a) A drum. [Obs.] Halliwell. (b) The part of the bagpipe containing the two lowest tubes, which always sound the key note and the fifth.
n.
See Halyard.
n.
A kind of net for catching birds.