What is the name meaning of HRIHAAN. Phrases containing HRIHAAN
See name meanings and uses of HRIHAAN!HRIHAAN
HRIHAAN
Boy/Male
Hindu
Gods chosen one, Lord Vishnu, Destroyer of enemies
Boy/Male
Tamil
Gods chosen one, Lord Vishnu, Destroyer of enemies
HRIHAAN
HRIHAAN
Girl/Female
Irish
Devotion to St. Catherine came to Ireland with Christianity. Revered for her courage and purity, Catherine in the Irish form, Cathleen, became such a popular name that W. B. Yeats chose it for the heroine of his 1899 play “The Countess Cathleen†which was inspired by an Irish folktale. In a time of famine the Devil offers food to the starving poor in exchange for their souls. But Cathleen convinces Satan to take her soul instead. When she dies the Devil comes to collect her soul but God intervenes and carries Cathleen to heaven, saying that “such a sacrificial act cannot justly lead to evil consequences.â€
Surname or Lastname
English
English : regional name from the county of Cornwall, which is named with the Old English tribal name Cornwealas. This is from Kernow (the term that the Cornish used to refer to themselves, a word of uncertain etymology, perhaps connected with a Celtic element meaning ‘horn’, ‘headland’), + Old English wealas ‘strangers’, ‘foreigners’, the term used by the Anglo-Saxons for British-speaking people.English : variant of Cornwell.
Girl/Female
Indian
Mother of Dharma, Swaminarayan sampraday name
Girl/Female
Arthurian Legend
White flower.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Close to heart Someone who gives guidance, Prophet (saw)'s grand daughter
Boy/Male
Muslim
Saffron the spice or yellow or precious or glowing, Best friend
Boy/Male
Tamil
Dhirendra | தீரேநà¯à®¤à¯à®°
God of courage, Lord of the brave
Girl/Female
Hindu
The unknown one
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
One Absorbed in God
Surname or Lastname
English (West Midlands)
English (West Midlands) : topographic name for someone who lived at a ‘new enclosure’ (from Middle English newe + hawe or heye), or a habitational name from some minor place named with these elements (in Old English, nēowe + haga). Newhay and Newhey occur several times as place names in Cheshire and Yorkshire.
HRIHAAN
HRIHAAN
HRIHAAN
HRIHAAN
HRIHAAN