What is the name meaning of ROSAR. Phrases containing ROSAR
See name meanings and uses of ROSAR!ROSAR
ROSAR
Boy/Male
American, Australian, French, Latin, Portuguese, Spanish
Rock; Stone; Rosary; Refers to Devotional Prayers Honoring Mary; Beautiful
Girl/Female
American, Australian, French, Spanish
Rosary; Beautiful
Female
Italian
Italian feminine form of Spanish unisex Rosario, ROSARIA means "rosary."
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
A Rosary of Rudrksa
Female
Spanish
Pet form of Spanish Rosario, CHARO means "rosary."
Girl/Female
Australian, Lebanese
A Flower
Female
French
French name ROSAIRE means "rosary."
Girl/Female
Spanish American
Beautiful.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : probably related to Roser, which is also unexplained.Altered spelling of German Roser or Röser (see Roser).
Girl/Female
Spanish
Nickname for Rosario.
Surname or Lastname
Translation of French Lemieux.English
Translation of French Lemieux.English : nickname from Old English bētere ‘fighter’, ‘beater’. Reaney suggests it may also be a short form of the various occupational names ending with -better, for example Leadbetter.German (Bavarian) : metonymic occupational name for a maker of rosaries, from Bavarian better ‘rosary’ (from beten ‘to pray’).
Boy/Male
Portuguese Spanish American
Rosary. Refers to devotional prayers honoring Mary.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Rosary; A String of Beads which Includes the Rudraksa
Female
Welsh
Welsh unisex name PADERAU means "beads; rosary."
Girl/Female
Australian, Portuguese
Garland of Roses
Surname or Lastname
English (Essex), French, German, and Italian (Apulia and Basilcata)
English (Essex), French, German, and Italian (Apulia and Basilcata) : from Latin pater noster ‘Our Father’, the opening words of the Lord’s Prayer, which is represented by large beads punctuating the rosary. The surname was a metonymic occupational name for a maker of rosaries, often a shortened form of the Middle English, Middle High German occupational term paternosterer. It may also have been originally a nickname for an excessively pious individual or for someone who was under a feudal obligation to say paternosters for his master as part of the service by which he held land.Dutch : probably a habitational name from the name of a house in Delft, ‘Int paternoster’, built in 1600. In this case the derivation is from the word as a term for manacles which hold the hands together so that it appears that the restrained person is praying.
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n.
One of the large beads in the rosary at which the paternoster is recited.
n.
A series of prayers (see Note below) arranged to be recited in order, on beads; also, a string of beads by which the prayers are counted.
n.
A rosary, consisting of a hundred and fifty beads, corresponding to the number of the psalms.
n.
A string of beads, or part of a string, used by Roman Catholic in praying; a third of a rosary, or fifty beads.
n.
A place where roses are cultivated; a nursery of roses. See Rosary, 1.
n.
A bed of roses, or place where roses grow.
n.
A chapelet; a garland; a series or collection, as of beautiful thoughts or of literary selections.
n.
A little perforated ball, to be strung on a thread, and worn for ornament; or used in a rosary for counting prayers, as by Roman Catholics and Mohammedans, whence the phrases to tell beads, to at one's beads, to bid beads, etc., meaning, to be at prayer.
n.
A Mohammedan rosary, consisting of ninety-nine beads.
n.
A cultivator of roses.
pl.
of Rosary
n.
A coin bearing the figure of a rose, fraudulently circulated in Ireland in the 13th century for a penny.