What is the name meaning of SIB. Phrases containing SIB
See name meanings and uses of SIB!SIB
SIB
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the popular medieval female personal name Sibley, a vernacular form of Latin Sibilla, from Greek Sibylla, a title of obscure origin borne by various oracular priestesses in classical times. In Christian mythology the sibyls came to be classed as pagan prophets (who had prophesied the coming of Christ), and hence the name was an acceptable one that could be bestowed on a Christian child.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Sibanarayan | ஸீபநாராயணÂ
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian
Variant of Siba'; The Queen of Sheba
Female
Cornish
, wise old woman.
Female
French
French and German form of Greek Sibylla, SIBYLLE means "prophetess."
Surname or Lastname
Spanish and Asturian-Leonese (SolÃs)
Spanish and Asturian-Leonese (SolÃs) : habitational name from SolÃs in Asturies or a similarly named place elsewhere.English : from a medieval personal name bestowed on a child born after the death of a sibling, from Middle English solace ‘comfort’, ‘consolation’. The word also came to have the sense ‘delight’, ‘amusement’, and in some cases the surname may have arisen from a nickname for a playful or entertaining person.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : name for someone who was related to an important local personality, from Middle English maugh, maw ‘relative’, especially by marriage (from Old English mÄge ‘female relative’). In the north of England this term was used more specifically to mean ‘brother-in-law’.English : topographic name from Middle English mawe ‘meadow’. Some early forms, such as Sibilla de la Mawe (Suffolk 1275), clearly indicate a topographic origin, by reason of the preposition and article.English : probably also from a Middle English personal name, Mawe, Old English MÄ“awa, perhaps originally a byname from Old English mÇ£w ‘sea mew’, ‘seagull’ (compare Mew).
Male
English
Variant spelling of Middle English Sybald, SIBALD means "bold victory."
Girl/Female
Tamil
Name of a king
Male
English
Pet form of Middle English Sibald, SIBBE means "bold victory."
Boy/Male
Muslim
Sibling
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places in Leicestershire and Cambridgeshire so called. The former, Sibetesdone in Domesday Book, is named with the Old English personal name Sigebed + dūn ‘hill’; the latter (Sibestune in Domesday Book) is named with the Old English personal name Sibbi or Sibba + tūn ‘settlement’.English : patronymic from the personal name Sib(be), which is a short form either of the female name Sibilla (see Sibley) or of the Middle English male name Sybald (see Sibbald).
Male
English
Pet form of Middle English Sibald, SIB means "bold victory."
Male
African
an indication, a sign.
Female
Greek
(ΣίβÏλλα) Greek name derived from the word sibylla, SIBYLLA means "prophetess."Â
Boy/Male
Tamil
Female
Cornish
, wise old woman.
Female
Irish
Irish Gaelic form of Latin Isabella, SIBÉAL means "God is my oath."
Girl/Female
Tamil
Goddess Parvati
Female
English
(ΣίβÏλ) Short form of Greek Sibylla, SIBYL means "prophetess." The sibyls are first mentioned by Heraclitus in the 5th century BC. "The Sibyl, with frenzied mouth uttering things not to be laughed at, unadorned and unperfumed, yet reaches to a thousand years with her voice by aid of the god," originally one of the chthonic earth-goddesses.
SIB
SIB
SIB
SIB
SIB
SIB
SIB
n. pl.
A group of roving Turanian tribes occupying Eastern Siberia and the Amoor valley. They resemble the Mongols.
n. pl.
An ignorant and degraded Turanian tribe which occupies a portion of Northern Russia and a part of Siberia.
n.
A genus of large edentulous sirenians, allied to the dugong and manatee, including but one species (R. Stelleri); -- called also Steller's sea cow. S () the nineteenth letter of the English alphabet, is a consonant, and is often called a sibilant, in allusion to its hissing sound. It has two principal sounds; one a mere hissing, as in sack, this; the other a vocal hissing (the same as that of z), as in is, wise. Besides these it sometimes has the sounds of sh and zh, as in sure, measure. It generally has its hissing sound at the beginning of words, but in the middle and at the end of words its sound is determined by usage. In a few words it is silent, as in isle, debris. With the letter h it forms the digraph sh. See Guide to pronunciation, // 255-261.
a.
Having a hissing sound; hissing; sibilant.
n.
A low, soft, sibilant voice or utterance, which can be heard only by those near at hand; voice or utterance that employs only breath sound without tone, friction against the edges of the vocal cords and arytenoid cartilages taking the place of the vibration of the cords that produces tone; sometimes, in a limited sense, the sound produced by such friction as distinguished from breath sound made by friction against parts of the mouth. See Voice, n., 2, and Guide to Pronunciation, // 5, 153, 154.
a.
Hissing; sibilant.
n.
An antelope (Saiga Tartarica) native of the plains of Siberia and Eastern Russia. The male has erect annulated horns, and tufts of long hair beneath the eyes and ears.
n.
The quality or state of being sibilant; sibilation.
n.
One who believes in a sibyl or the sibylline prophecies.
n.
A Siberian ibex.
n.
A rolling, marshy, mossy plain of Northern Siberia.
n.
A native or inhabitant of Siberia.
n.
A low, sibilant sound.
a.
Making a hissing sound; uttered with a hissing sound; hissing; as, s, z, sh, and zh, are sibilant elementary sounds.
n. pl.
(Ethnol.) A nomadic Mongolian tribe native of Northern Siberia, and supposed to be of Turkish stock. They are mainly pastoral in their habits.
n.
Alt. of Sibilancy
n.
A sibiliant letter.
a.
Of or pertaining to Siberia, a region comprising all northern Asia and belonging to Russia; as, a Siberian winter.
a.
Pertaining to the sibyls; uttered, written, or composed by sibyls; like the productions of sibyls.