Search for Names
From WikiName
| Origin | Meaning | |
|---|---|---|
| Aamodt | Norse | topographic name for someone who lived by the confluence of two streams |
| Abadie | French | someone living near a family chapel |
| Abbey | English French Scottish |
someone who is a lay-abbot in a monastery, nunnery |
| Abbruzzese | Italian | someone from the Abruzzi |
| Abend | German | topographic name for someone living to the west of a settlement. |
| Abruzzese | Italian | regional name for someone from the Abruzzi |
| Abruzzo | Italian | someone from Abruzzi |
| Abshier | English German |
someone who trained hawks, hawker |
| Achterberg | German | topographic name for someone who lived behind the hill\u2019 |
| Ackerson | German Dutch Jewish |
someone who lived in a corner house or kept a corner shop |
| Acrey | Norse | son of Zachary, someone living by a piece of plowed land |
| Acy | French English |
someone from any of various places called Acy |
| Adorno | Italian | adorned, hawk-like, someone who trains hawks |
| Ahmann | German | someone living near running water |
| Back | English German Dutch |
someone with a hunched back, occupational name for someone who made kneading troughs or buckets |
| Backer | English | topographic name for someone who lived on a hill or at the rear of a settlement,from Middle English bakke \u2018back\u2019, \u2018spine\u2019 + the suffix -er denoting an inhabitant. |
| Backman | English Swedish German |
someone who lived on a hill or at the rear of a settlement, baker |
| Backus | English | someone who worked at the bakehouse |
| Badia | Spanish | a topographic name for someone living near an abbey |
| Badman | English | occupational name for the servant of someone called Badd, worthless |
| more results... | ||


