What is the name meaning of LAVINA. Phrases containing LAVINA
See name meanings and uses of LAVINA!LAVINA
LAVINA
Girl/Female
Latin American Spanish
In classical mythology, Lavinia was the daughter of King Latinus and the wife of Trojan hero...
Girl/Female
Tamil
Purity, Woman of rome
Girl/Female
Hindu
Purity, Woman of rome
Girl/Female
Australian, Christian, English, German, Indian, Sanskrit, Spanish, Tamil
Vineyard; Lute Player; Vein; Elf Friend; Pet Form of Lavina
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, English, French, German, Hindu, Indian, Latin, Spanish, Tamil
Mother of the Romans; Woman of Rome; Purified; Derived from the Roman Given Name Levinia; Purity
LAVINA
LAVINA
Boy/Male
Hindu
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Son of the Moon
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English, French, Jamaican
Counselor; Variant of Raymond; Protecting Hands
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived near a stone cross set up by the roadside or in a marketplace, from Old Norse kross (via Gaelic from Latin crux, genitive crucis), which in Middle English quickly and comprehensively displaced the Old English form crūc (see Crouch). In a few cases the surname may have been given originally to someone who lived by a crossroads, but this sense of the word seems to have been a comparatively late development. In other cases, the surname (and its European cognates) may have denoted someone who carried the cross in processions of the Christian Church, but in English at least the usual word for this sense was Crozier.Irish : reduced form of McCrossen.In North America this name has absorbed examples of cognate names from other languages, such as French Lacroix.
Girl/Female
African, Arabic, Swahili
Martyr; Witness; True Copy
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Name of King
Surname or Lastname
English (Cornwall)
English (Cornwall) : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : apparently a nickname for a well-turned-out person, from the adjective trim ‘well-equipped’, ‘neatly made’. The word is first attested in the early 16th century, but may well have been in colloquial use much earlier.English : from an Old English personal name, Trymma.Irish : habitational name, originally de Truim, from a place in County Meath named Trim.
Biblical
generation, habitation
LAVINA
LAVINA
LAVINA
LAVINA
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