What is the name meaning of FLAK. Phrases containing FLAK
See name meanings and uses of FLAK!FLAK
FLAK
Surname or Lastname
English
English : probably from Middle English flack, flak ‘turf’, ‘sod’ (as found in the place name Flatmoor, in Cambridgeshire), and hence perhaps a metonymic occupational name for a turf cutter.North German : topographic name probably derived from a lost word denoting stagnant water.
Girl/Female
Australian, Finnish, German, Swedish
Flake
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Till End
FLAK
FLAK
Surname or Lastname
Scottish
Scottish : variant of Troup.English : variant of Throop.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Tamil
Poet; Good Girl
Girl/Female
Irish
Boy/Male
Tamil
Vansidhar | வாநà¯à®¸à¯€à®¤à®¾à®°Â
Lord Krishna
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit
One-pointed; With One Attention
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Telugu
Sun Ray
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a scribe or secretary, originally a member of a minor religious order who undertook such duties. The word clerc denoted a member of a religious order, from Old English cler(e)c ‘priest’, reinforced by Old French clerc. Both are from Late Latin clericus, from Greek klērikos, a derivative of klēros ‘inheritance’, ‘legacy’, with reference to the priestly tribe of Levites (see Levy) ‘whose inheritance was the Lord’. In medieval Christian Europe, clergy in minor orders were permitted to marry and so found families; thus the surname could become established. In the Middle Ages it was virtually only members of religious orders who learned to read and write, so that the term clerk came to denote any literate man.
Female
Hebrew
(×ï‹×¨-לִי) Hebrew name OR-LEE means "light is mine."
Surname or Lastname
English (chiefly South Yorkshire)
English (chiefly South Yorkshire) : topographic name for someone who lived on land enclosed by a bend in a river, from Old English binnan ēa ‘within the river’, or a habitational name from places in Kent called Binney and Binny, which have this origin.Scottish : habitational name from Binney or Binniehill near Falkirk, named in Gaelic as Beinnach, from beinn ‘hill’ + the locative suffix -ach.
Boy/Male
Assamese, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi, Sikh, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, Traditional
Feet of the Lord
FLAK
FLAK
FLAK
FLAK
FLAK
v. i.
To be peeled; to peel off in flakes.
n.
A flake; also, a lock, as of wool.
v. t.
To draw out into flakes; to card, as wool.
n.
A sweetish exudation in the form of pale yellow friable flakes, coming from several trees and shrubs and used in medicine as a gentle laxative, as the secretion of Fraxinus Ornus, and F. rotundifolia, the manna ashes of Southern Europe.
a.
Clothed with small flocks or flakes; woolly.
n.
Fig.: Something white like snow, as the white color (argent) in heraldry; something which falls in, or as in, flakes.
a.
Formed into a succession of flakes; laminated.
v. t.
To form into flakes.
v. t.
A thin plate of any material; a flake.
a.
Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike.
v. i.
To separate in flakes; to peel or scale off.
imp. & p. p.
of Flake
n.
A kind of gum procured from a spiny leguminous shrub (Astragalus gummifer) of Western Asia, and other species of Astragalus. It comes in hard whitish or yellowish flakes or filaments, and is nearly insoluble in water, but slowly swells into a mucilaginous mass, which is used as a substitute for gum arabic in medicine and the arts. Called also gum tragacanth.
n.
A flake, or small filmy mass, of snow.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Flake
a.
Filled with white flakes; mothery; -- said vinegar when containing mother.
n.
Watery particles congealed into white or transparent crystals or flakes in the air, and falling to the earth, exhibiting a great variety of very beautiful and perfect forms.
n.
A loose filmy mass or a thin chiplike layer of anything; a film; flock; lamina; layer; scale; as, a flake of snow, tallow, or fish.
n.
The state of being flaky.
n.
Anything like flakes or scales adhering to a surface.