What is the name meaning of ADDIE. Phrases containing ADDIE
See name meanings and uses of ADDIE!ADDIE
ADDIE
Girl/Female
Welsh
Beautiful.
Girl/Female
Welsh
Beautiful.
Girl/Female
American, Christian, German, Swedish
Noble Kind; Kind Spirit; Brightness; Form of Adelaide
Female
English
 Pet form of English Adelaide, ADDIE means "noble sort." Compare with another form of Addie.
Female
Hebrew
 Variant spelling of Hebrew unisex Adi, ADDIE means "my ornament" or "my witness." Compare with another form of Addie.
Boy/Male
British, English, Hebrew, Teutonic
Son of Adam; Son of the Red Earth; In the Bible God Created Adam-the First Man-out of the Red Earth and Breathed Life into Him; My Ornament; Awe-inspiring; Highborn
Boy/Male
Hebrew American
Son of Adam: Man of the red earth.
Girl/Female
French American German
Nobility. French form of the Old German Adalheidis, a compound of 'athal' (noble) and 'haida'...
Male
Hebrew
 Compare with feminine Addie. Pet form of Hebrew Adam, ADDIE means "earth" or "red." Variant spelling of Hebrew unisex Adi, meaning "my ornament" or "my witness."
ADDIE
ADDIE
Surname or Lastname
English
English : perhaps an altered form of Warlock, an English surname of uncertain origin; it is more likely to be from Old Norse varðlokkur ‘incantations’ than from Old English wǣrloga ‘traitor’, ‘devil’.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Spring
Boy/Male
English
Divinely glorious.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Shatrughan | ஷதà¯à®°à¯à®•à¯à®¨
Lord ramas brother
Girl/Female
Tamil
Devahuti | தேவாஹà¯à®¤à¯€
Daughter of Manu (Daughter of Maalik bin Amr al adwaniyah)
Girl/Female
Indian
Spring, Springtime, Garden
Surname or Lastname
English (Lancashire)
English (Lancashire) : habitational name from Unsworth, a place in Greater Manchester, named from the genitive case of the Old English byname Hund meaning ‘dog’ + Old English worð ‘enclosure’.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : habitational name from any of at least three places named Cowden. One in Northumbria occurs in 1286 as Colden and is derived from Old English col ‘(char)coal’ + denu ‘valley’; that in East Yorkshire occurs in Domesday Book as Coledun and is from Old English col + dūn ‘hill’; while one in Kent is recorded in 1160 as Cudena and is from Old English cū ‘cow’ + denn ‘pasture’. The last does not appear to have yielded any surnames; the surname is more or less restricted to northern England, and is also found in northern Ireland, where it may be of Scottish origin, from places called Cowden near Dollar and near Dalkeith, Lothian.
Boy/Male
Shakespearean
The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus' Son to Tamora.
Boy/Male
Arthurian Legend
A supposed king of Britain.
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