What is the name meaning of HAMI. Phrases containing HAMI
See name meanings and uses of HAMI!HAMI
HAMI
Surname or Lastname
Scottish (of Norman origin)
Scottish (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Haineville or Henneville in Manche, France, named from the Germanic personal name Hagano + Old French ville ‘settlement’.English (Yorkshire) : nickname for a scarred or maimed person, from Middle English, Old English hamel ‘mutilated’, ‘crooked’.Irish (Ulster) : according to MacLysaght, a shortened Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hÃdhmaill ‘descendant of Ãdhmall’, which he derives from ádhmall ‘active’.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Friend, Close friend
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : from a personal name, Hamo(n), which is generally from a continental Germanic name Haimo, a short form of various compound names beginning with haim ‘home’, although it could also be from the Old Norse personal name Hámundr, composed of the elements hár ‘high’ + mund ‘protection’. As an Irish name it is generally an importation from England, but has also been used to represent Hamill 3 and, more rarely, McCammon.
Boy/Male
Indian
The praised one
Boy/Male
Indian
Protector, Patron, Supporter, Defender
Boy/Male
Muslim
Protector, Patron, Supporter, Defender
Male
English
Anglicized form of Scottish Gaelic Seumas, HAMISH means "supplanter."
Girl/Female
Indian
Praiseworthy, Commendable, Friend
Girl/Female
Tamil
Haminagni | ஹமீநாகà¯à®¨à¯€
Boy/Male
Indian
Intelligent, Brilliant
Boy/Male
Indian
Friend, Close friend
Boy/Male
Muslim
Intelligent, Brilliant
Girl/Female
Indian
Boy/Male
Hindu
Very rich king, A Raga
Girl/Female
Indian
Praiseworthy, Praiser of Allah
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, and Irish
English, Scottish, and Irish : variant spelling of Hamill.French : topographic name for someone who lived and worked at an outlying farm dependent on the main village, Old French hamel (a diminutive from a Germanic element cognate with Old English hÄm ‘homestead’).German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : habitational name from the city of Hamlin, German Hameln, Yiddish Haml, where the Hamel river empties into the Weser. The name of the river probably derives from the Germanic element ham ‘water meadow’.Dutch : metonymic occupational name for a shepherd, from Middle Dutch hamel ‘wether’, ‘castrated ram’.A Hamel from Normandy, France, is documented in St. Jean et St. François, Quebec, in 1666.
Boy/Male
Indian
Praising (God), Loving (God), Friend, Praiser, All-laudable
Girl/Female
Muslim
Close friend
Boy/Male
Muslim
Praising (God), Loving (God), Friend, Praiser, All-laudable
Boy/Male
Indian
Servant of the praiseworthy, The ever praised
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n.
A descendant of Ham, Noah's second son. See Gen. x. 6-20.
n.
Hook-shaped.
n.
A large edible river fish (Erythrinus macrodon) of Guiana.
n.
A fossil cephalopod of the genus Hamites, related to the ammonites, but having the last whorl bent into a hooklike form.
a.
A term used by Sir William Hamilton to define propositions having their quantity indicated by a verbal sign; as, all, none, etc.; -- contrasted with preindesignate, defining propositions of which the quantity is not so indicated.
n.
A member of a race somewhat resembling the Arabs, but often classed as Hamitic, who were formerly the inhabitants of the whole of North Africa from the Mediterranean southward into the Sahara, and who still occupy a large part of that region; -- called also Kabyles. Also, the language spoken by this people.
n.
The doctrine that the existence of a personal Deity, an unseen world, etc., can be neither proved nor disproved, because of the necessary limits of the human mind (as sometimes charged upon Hamilton and Mansel), or because of the insufficiency of the evidence furnished by physical and physical data, to warrant a positive conclusion (as taught by the school of Herbert Spencer); -- opposed alike dogmatic skepticism and to dogmatic theism.
n.
A Hamitic people of East Central Africa.