What is the name meaning of DARWIN. Phrases containing DARWIN
See name meanings and uses of DARWIN!DARWIN
DARWIN
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, Danish, English
Dear Friend
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Old English personal name Dēorwine, composed of the elements dēor ‘dear’ + wine ‘friend’. This name is attested in the 10th century, but it was not common; nevertheless it may have survived long enough to become a Middle English personal name and so given rise to the surname.English : habitational name from Darwen in Lancashire, named from the Darwin river (earlier Derwent) on which it stands. This seems to be a British name derived from a word meaning ‘oak’.
Male
English
Probably a variant spelling of English Darwin, DERWIN means "dear friend."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a settlement on the river Dart in Devon, which is named from a British term meaning ‘oak’ and is thus a cognate of Darwin 2.English : metonymic occupational name for a maker of arrows, from Middle English dart (from Old French darde).
Boy/Male
English American
Dear friend. Nineteenth-century naturalist Charles Darwin was the first major exponent of human...
DARWIN
DARWIN
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Profit; Gain; Benefit; Advantage
Boy/Male
Australian, Danish, Dutch, French, German, Latin, Netherlands, Swedish
Laurentium was a City South of Rome Known for Its Numerous Laurel Trees; Man from Laurentum; From the Place of the Laurel Trees
Boy/Male
Hindu
Prayer
Boy/Male
Hindu
Boy/Male
Indian
The Moon
Boy/Male
Hindu
Flowering
Boy/Male
Australian, Polish
Manly
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Arabic, Gujarati, Indian, Kannada, Muslim
Rays of Light
Female
African
second-born child.
Boy/Male
Buddhist, Indian, Japanese
Ancient Reflection
DARWIN
DARWIN
DARWIN
DARWIN
DARWIN
a.
Destitute of function, or of an appropriate organ. Darwin.
n.
One of the imaginary granules or atoms which, according to Darwin's hypothesis of pangenesis, are continually being thrown off from every cell or unit, and circulate freely throughout the system, and when supplied with proper nutriment multiply by self-division and ultimately develop into cells like those from which they were derived. They are supposed to be transmitted from the parent to the offspring, but are often transmitted in a dormant state during many generations and are then developed. See Pangenesis.
n.
An advocate of Darwinism.
n.
The theory or doctrines put forth by Darwin. See above.
n.
An hypothesis advanced by Darwin in explanation of heredity.
a.
Pertaining to Darwin; as, the Darwinian theory, a theory of the manner and cause of the supposed development of living things from certain original forms or elements.
n.
Darwinism.