What is the name meaning of INKITHAM. Phrases containing INKITHAM
See name meanings and uses of INKITHAM!INKITHAM
INKITHAM
INKITHAM
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
A King
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Woodstock in Oxfordshire, named from Old English wudu ‘wood’ + stoc ‘settlement’.
Girl/Female
Indian
White Flower
Girl/Female
Hindu
Has appeared
Girl/Female
Tamil
Kowshikaa | கோவà¯à®·à¯€à®•ா
The unique
Boy/Male
Bengali, Indian
A Fruit
Surname or Lastname
English, Welsh, and Irish
English, Welsh, and Irish : from the personal name Piers, the usual Norman vernacular form of Peter. In Wales this represents a patronymic ap Piers. In Ireland it represents a reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Piarais ‘son of Piaras’, a Gaelicized form of Piers.Americanized form of some similar-sounding Jewish surname.Franklin Pierce (1804–69), 14th president of the United States, was born in Hillsborough, NH, on the New England frontier. His English ancestor Thomas Pierce emigrated to Charlestown, MA, in 1633/34.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived on the top of a hill, from Middle English coppe, Old English copp ‘summit’ (a transferred sense of copp ‘head’, ‘bowl’, cognate with modern English cup), or a habitational name from Copp in Lancashire, named with this word.English : nickname for someone with a large or deformed head, from Middle English cop(p) ‘head’ (the same word as in 1 above).Respelling of German Kopp.
Surname or Lastname
German (of Slavic origin)
German (of Slavic origin) : from a pet form of the personal name Pavel or Paweł, respectively the Czech and Polish forms of Paul, or from a Sorbian cognate.German (of Slavic origin) : nickname for a small man, from Slavic palac ‘thumb’.Irish : MacLysaght ascribes the origin of this surname in Ireland to the arrival there in the 15th century of a Lombard family of bankers named de Palatio.English : from Old French palis, paleis ‘palisade’, ‘fence’, hence a topographic name for someone who lived by a palisade or a metonymic occupational name for a maker of fences.English : possibly a metonymic occupational name for someone who worked at a palace (bishop’s, archbishop’s, or royal), from Old French, Middle English palais, paleis.English : metonymic occupational name for a worker at a straw stack, from Old French paille ‘straw’ + Middle English hous ‘house’.Greek : ornamental name or nickname from Albanian pallë ‘sword’.Catalan (Pallà s) : variant spelling of Pallars, a regional name from the Catalan district of Pallars, in the Pyrenees.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Sky
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INKITHAM
INKITHAM
INKITHAM