What is the name meaning of FLOWER. Phrases containing FLOWER
See name meanings and uses of FLOWER!FLOWER
FLOWER
Girl/Female
Tamil
Flower
Boy/Male
Tamil
Flower, Blossom
Boy/Male
Tamil
Parijatapa Harakaya | பரீஜாதாபா ஹராகாயா
One who removes parijath flower
Parijatapa Harakaya | பரீஜாதாபா ஹராகாயா
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Anglo-Norman French gardinier ‘gardener’. In medieval times this normally denoted a cultivator of edible produce in an orchard or kitchen garden, rather than one who tended ornamental lawns and flower beds.Americanized form of French Desjardins or German Gärtner (see Gartner).
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : occupational name denoting a servant who carried the ewer to guests at table so that they could wash their hands, Anglo-Norman French and Middle English ewerer (related to ewere ‘jug’), with the French definite article l’.Cornish : variant of Flower 4.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : patronymic from Flower 1.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Flower
Boy/Male
Tamil
Flower, Blossom
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from the personal name Florence, used by both sexes (Latin Florentius (masculine) and Florentia (feminine), ultimately from flos, genitive floris ‘flower’). Both names were borne by several early Christian martyrs, but in the Middle Ages the masculine name was far more common.English and French : local name for someone from Florence in Italy, originally named in Latin as Florentia.
Girl/Female
Tamil
A flower
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English flo(u)r ‘flower’, ‘blossom’ (Old French flur, from Latin flos, genitive floris). This was a conventional term of endearment in medieval romantic poetry, and as early as the 13th century it is also regularly found as a female personal name.English : metonymic occupational name for a miller or flour merchant, or perhaps a nickname for a pasty-faced person, from Middle English flo(u)r ‘flour’. This is in origin the same word as in 1, with the transferred sense ‘flower, pick of the meal’. Although the two words are now felt to be accidental homophones, they were not distinguished in spelling before the 18th century.English : occupational name for an arrowsmith, from an agent derivative of Middle English flŠ‘arrow’ (Old English flÄ).Welsh : Anglicized form of the Welsh personal name Llywarch, of unexplained origin.Translation of French Lafleur.
Girl/Female
Australian, Christian, French, Latin, Portuguese
Blooming; Flower; Form of Florence
Boy/Male
Tamil
Flowering
Girl/Female
French English
Flower.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Beautiful flower
Female
English
English name derived from the vocabulary word, "flower," from Proto-Indo-European *bhlo-, FLOWER means "to blossom, flourish."
Boy/Male
Tamil
Garland of flowers
Girl/Female
Tamil
A flower
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Melhuish in Devon, so called from Old English mǣl(e) ‘brightly colored’, ‘flowery’ + hīwisc ‘hide’ (a measurement of land).Scottish : variant of Mellis 2.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sikh
Flowers
FLOWER
FLOWER
Biblical
poverty; bitter; a rebel
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.Italian (Venice and Mantua) and Greek (Zanes) : from a variant of the Venetian personal name Z(u)an(n)i ‘John’ (see Zani).Americanized spelling of German and Jewish Zahn.Robert Zane was a cloth maker of English origin, a founding member of the Quaker colony that was set up at Salem, NJ, in 1676.
Girl/Female
American, Australian, French, Spanish
Star
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Tamil, Telugu
Bright; Slave to Lord Muruga
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Love for the Recitation of God's Name
Boy/Male
English
Keeper of horses.
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Carrie, KARRIE means "man."
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Sikh
Lion
Girl/Female
Greek
Very dear.
Boy/Male
Teutonic American
Defender in war.
FLOWER
FLOWER
FLOWER
FLOWER
FLOWER
n.
The state of being flowery.
n.
A small flower; a floret.
n.
State of flowers; flowers, collectively or in general.
a.
Highly embellished with figurative language; florid; as, a flowery style.
n.
The goat's beard, whose flowers close at midday.
a.
Having conspicuous flowers; -- used as an epithet with many names of plants; as, flowering ash; flowering dogwood; flowering almond, etc.
v. i.
To come off as flowers by sublimation.
a.
Having no flowers.
a.
Full of flowers; abounding with blossoms.
a.
Abounding with flowers.
n.
A plant which flowers or blossoms.
v. t.
To embellish with flowers; to adorn with imitated flowers; as, flowered silk.
v. i.
To blossom; to bloom; to expand the petals, as a plant; to produce flowers; as, this plant flowers in June.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Flower
n.
State of being without flowers.
n.
A genus of perennial herbs (Iris) with swordlike leaves and large three-petaled flowers often of very gay colors, but probably white in the plant first chosen for the royal French emblem.
n.
A tropical leguminous bush (Poinciana, / Caesalpinia, pulcherrima) with prickly branches, and showy yellow or red flowers; -- so named from its having been sometimes used for hedges in the West Indies.
a.
Bearing three flowers together, or only three flowers.
a.
Dressed with garlands of flowers.
n.
The act of adorning with flowers.