What is the name meaning of CEM. Phrases containing CEM
See name meanings and uses of CEM!CEM
CEM
Boy/Male
Indian
Perfect beauty
Surname or Lastname
English
English : probably a habitational name from East and West Kimber in the parish of Northlew in Devon, so named from Old English cempa ‘warrior’ (or the Old English personal name Cempa) + bearn ‘grove’, ‘wood’. It may also be an altered form of Kimbrough.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant of Kinberg.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place called Kempton in Shropshire, named from an Old English personal name Cempa (or the Old English vocabulary word cempa ‘warrior’) + tūn ‘farmstead’, ‘settlement’.English : variant of Kimpton.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Perfect beauty
Boy/Male
Arabic, Australian, British, German, Muslim, Turkish
Perfection; Beauty
Biblical
their secret; their cement
Girl/Female
Biblical
Their secret, their cement.
Boy/Male
Australian, Danish, German, Turkish
Ruler
Girl/Female
Arabic
Beauty
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a wool or flax comber, Middle English kem(be)stere (an agent derivative of Old English cemban ‘to comb’). Although this was originally a feminine form of the masculine kembere, by the Middle English period the suffix -stre had lost its feminine force, and the term was used to refer to both sexes. Compare Baxter, Brewster, Dexter.
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, Dutch, and North German
English, Scottish, Dutch, and North German : status name for a champion, Middle English and Middle Low German kempe. In the Middle Ages a champion was a professional fighter on behalf of others; for example the King’s Champion, at the coronation, had the duty of issuing a general challenge to battle to anyone who denied the king’s right to the throne. The Middle English word corresponds to Old English cempa and Old Norse kempa ‘warrior’; both these go back to Germanic campo ‘warrior’, which is the source of the Dutch and North German name, corresponding to High German Kampf.Dutch : metonymic occupational name for someone who grew or processed hemp, from Middle Dutch canep ‘hemp’.
CEM
CEM
Girl/Female
Indian, Kannada
Kindness
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
One who Serves Selflessly
Boy/Male
Italian Greek
Loyal.
Girl/Female
British, English
Occupational Name; Cloth-walker
Boy/Male
French
Strong and masculine.
Boy/Male
British, English
Loyal One
Biblical
it is requiring or beseeching
Boy/Male
Norse
From the spearman's ford.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Flower
Girl/Female
German, Swedish
Grace; Favor
CEM
CEM
CEM
CEM
CEM
n.
The layer of bone investing the root and neck of a tooth; -- called also cementum.
v. i.
To become cemented or firmly united; to cohere.
n.
To overlay or coat with cement; as, to cement a cellar bottom.
pl.
of Cemetery
n.
A white to gray volcanic tufa, formed of decomposed trachytic cinders; -- sometimes used as a cement. Hence, a coarse sort of plaster or mortar, durable in water, and used to line cisterns and other reservoirs of water.
n.
To unite or cause to adhere by means of a cement.
v. i.
To become one; to be cemented or consolidated; to combine, as by adhesion or mixture; to coalesce; to grow together.
a.
Of or pertaining to a cemetery.
a.
Of or pertaining to cement, as of a tooth; as, cemental tubes.
n.
A process which consists in surrounding a solid body with the powder of other substances, and heating the whole to a degree not sufficient to cause fusion, the physical properties of the body being changed by chemical combination with powder; thus iron becomes steel by cementation with charcoal, and green glass becomes porcelain by cementation with sand.
n.
A person or thing that cements.
imp. & p. p.
of Cement
n.
The powder used in cementation. See Cementation, n., 2.
n.
Of the nature of cement.
v. t.
To separate, as things cemented or luted; to take the lute or the clay from.
a.
Having the quality of cementing or uniting firmly.
n.
The act or process of cementing.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Cement