What is the name meaning of AVIC. Phrases containing AVIC
See name meanings and uses of AVIC!AVIC
AVIC
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Immovable; Steady
Girl/Female
French English
Warlike.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Norman female personal name Avice (Old French Avice, Latin Avitia, also found in a masculine form, Avitius). This is of uncertain origin, perhaps from a Celtic (Gaulish) name.French : Tanguay and Jetté have people named Avice, Avisse in Quebec from 1666. Nègre has an Avèze (Puy-de-Dome) also deriving from Avitius.
Female
Hebrew
(×ֲבִיחַיִל) Variant spelling of Hebrew unisex Abihayil, AVICHAYIL means "father of might."Â
Girl/Female
British, English
Rule with Mercy
Female
Hebrew
(×ֲבִיחַיִל) Hebrew unisex name ABIYHAYIL means "father of might." In the bible, this is the name of the wife of Rehoboam, the father of Esther, a Levite who was the head of the house of Merari, and several other characters. Abihail is the Anglicized form. Also spelled Avichayil.
Girl/Female
Hebrew
Gives joy.
Girl/Female
British, Christian, English
Believed to have been Introduced During the Norman Conquest
Boy/Male
Hebrew
My father is alive.
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Unmovable
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Avis, AVICE means "bird."
Boy/Male
Tamil
Unmovable
AVIC
AVIC
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Tender; Resilient
Biblical
charmers, regarders of times
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Touch Stone
Girl/Female
French German
Of the race of women.
Girl/Female
Irish
Waterfall.
Boy/Male
Australian, Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, German, Greek, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Latin
Farmer; Earth Worker
Boy/Male
Hindu
Attachment, Devotion, Love
Boy/Male
Italian Spanish
Enduring. The poet Dante Alighieri wrote The Divine Comedy with its graphic description of...
Boy/Male
Hebrew
God builds.
Boy/Male
English Anglo Saxon
Hero.
AVIC
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AVIC
n.
One of the movable, slender, spinelike organs or parts with which certain bryozoans are furnished. They are regarded as specially modified zooids, of nearly the same nature as Avicularia.
n.
Any one of various species of marine bivalve shells belonging to the genus Avicula, in which the hinge border projects like a wing.
n.
A name given to several plants which have soft, velvety leaves, as the Abutilon Avicennae, the Cissampelos Pareira, and the Lavatera arborea, and even the common mullein.
n. pl.
See prehensile processes on the cells of some Bryozoa, often having the shape of a bird's bill.
n.
a common weed with jointed stems (Polygonum aviculare); knotweed.
a.
Of or pertaining to a bird or to birds.
n.
A weed with a stem of many joints (Illecebrum verticillatum); also, the Polygonum aviculare or knotgrass.
n.
A genus of very large hairy spiders having four lungs and only four spinnerets. They do not spin webs, but usually construct tubes in the earth, which are often furnished with a trapdoor. The South American bird spider (Mygale avicularia), and the crab spider, or matoutou (M. cancerides) are among the largest species. Some of the species are erroneously called tarantulas, as the Texas tarantula (M. Hentzii).
n.
A genus of marine bivalves, having a pearly interior, allied to the pearl oyster; -- so called from a supposed resemblance of the typical species to a bird.
n.
The knotgrass (Polygonum aviculare).
n.
An individual zooid of a bryozoan coralline, of which there may be two or more kinds in a single colony. The zooecia usually have a wreath of tentacles around the mouth, and a well developed stomach and intestinal canal; but these parts are lacking in the other zooids (Avicularia, Ooecia, etc.).
n.
Rearing and care of birds.