What is the name meaning of COFIELD. Phrases containing COFIELD
See name meanings and uses of COFIELD!COFIELD
COFIELD
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Caulfield.Americanized spelling of German Kauffeld (see Caufield) or alternatively perhaps of the topographic name Kohfeld, a Low German variant of Kuhfeld, which is from Middle High German kuo ‘cow’ + velt ‘open country’.
COFIELD
COFIELD
Boy/Male
Hindu
Murugan
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi, Telugu
Miracle
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Blue
Boy/Male
Native American
White moon.
Female
English
Medieval English contracted form of Roman Latin Petronel, PERONEL means "little rock."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a small enclosed field (Old English croft) where rye (Old English ryge) was grown, or a habitational name from any of various minor places so named, such as Ryecoft in Gloucestershire or Cheshire.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Bathurst in the parish of Warbleton, Sussex, named with the Old English personal name Bada (a short form of the various compound names formed with beadu ‘battle’) + Old English hyrst ‘wooded hill’.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Shanmuka | ஷாநà¯à®®à¯à®•ா
Shanmuka means Lord of Subramaniam son of Lord Shiva, Lord kartikeyalord Murugan
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a Germanic personal name composed of the elements bald ‘bold’, ‘brave’ + wine ‘friend’, which was extremely popular among the Normans and in Flanders in the early Middle Ages. It was the personal name of the Crusader who in 1100 became the first Christian king of Jerusalem, and of four more Crusader kings of Jerusalem. It was also borne by Baldwin, Count of Flanders (1172–1205), leader of the Fourth Crusade, who became first Latin Emperor of Constantinople (1204). As an American surname it has absorbed Dutch spellings such as Boudewijn.Irish : surname adopted in Donegal by bearers of the Gaelic name Ó Maolagáin (see Milligan), due to association of Gaelic maol ‘bald’, ‘hairless’ with English bald.A John Baldwin from Buckinghamshire, England, arrived in the U.S. in 1638 and settled in Milford, CT.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Jain, Sanskrit
Female Priest; Scholar; Head of Vedas; Priest; Brightness; Cookie
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COFIELD
COFIELD
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COFIELD