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  • Shinjan | ஷிஂஜந
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Shinjan | ஷிஂஜந

    Music of Payal

  • Payoja | பாயோஜ஼ா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Payoja | பாயோஜ஼ா

    Lotus

  • Pay
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Kent)

    Pay

    English (mainly Kent) : nickname from Middle English pē, pā ‘peacock’ (see Peacock).English : from an early medieval personal name, apparently masculine, but of uncertain origin; perhaps derived from 1, or, as Reaney suggests, a survival of Old English Pæga.French : habitational name from places called Le Pay, in Indre, Rhône, and Vendée. This may also be a variant of pays ‘region’, ‘country’, used to denote a local person.Irish (County Kilkenny) : apparently from the Old English female personal name Pega, taken to Ireland (Kilkenny) by English settlers. Peakirk in Northamptonshire, England, is named for St. Pega (died c. 719), who reputedly founded a cell there.

  • Payodhar | பாயோதர
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Payodhar | பாயோதர

    Cloud

  • Darshana | தர்ஷநா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Darshana | தர்ஷநா

    Paying respect, Vision, Knowledge

  • Knight
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Knight

    English : status name from Middle English knyghte ‘knight’, Old English cniht ‘boy’, ‘youth’, ‘serving lad’. This word was used as a personal name before the Norman Conquest, and the surname may in part reflect a survival of this. It is also possible that in a few cases it represents a survival of the Old English sense into Middle English, as an occupational name for a domestic servant. In most cases, however, it clearly comes from the more exalted sense that the word achieved in the Middle Ages. In the feudal system introduced by the Normans the word was applied at first to a tenant bound to serve his lord as a mounted soldier. Hence it came to denote a man of some substance, since maintaining horses and armor was an expensive business. As feudal obligations became increasingly converted to monetary payments, the term lost its precise significance and came to denote an honorable estate conferred by the king on men of noble birth who had served him well. Knights in this last sense normally belonged to ancient noble families with distinguished family names of their own, so that the surname is more likely to have been applied to a servant in a knightly house or to someone who had played the part of a knight in a pageant or won the title in some contest of skill.Irish : part translation of Gaelic Mac an Ridire ‘son of the rider or knight’. See also McKnight.

  • Payod | பயோத
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Payod | பயோத

    Cloud

  • Ingle
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ingle

    English : from either of two Old Norse personal names: Ingjaldr, in which the prefix in- probably reinforces the element -gjaldr, related to Old Norse gjalda ‘to pay or recompense’, or Ingólfr ‘Ing’s wolf’ (Ing was an ancient Germanic fertility god).English : habitational name from Ingol in Lancashire, which is named from the Old English personal name Inga + holh ‘hollow’, ‘depression’.Probably a variant of German Ingel, from a short form of any of several Germanic personal names formed with Ing- (see 1 above).An early bearer, Richard Ingle (1609–c. 1653), was a rebel and a pirate who first came to the colonies in 1631 or 1632 as a tobacco merchant. He is known to have practiced piracy in MD.

  • Dring
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Dring

    English : from Old Norse drengr ‘young man’, but with more than one possible interpretation. It may reflect the personal name (originally a byname) of this form, which had some currency in the most Scandinavian-influenced areas of medieval England. Alternatively it may reflect the Middle English borrowing of the vocabulary word in the sense ‘servant’, later a technical term of the feudal system of Northumbria for a free tenant who held land by military and agricultural service, sometimes paying rent as well or in commutation.

  • Namat | நாமத
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Namat | நாமத

    To pay homage

  • PAYAM
  • Male

    Iranian/Persian

    PAYAM

    (پيام) Persian name PAYAM means "message."

  • Hallas
  • Surname or Lastname

    Greek

    Hallas

    Greek : probably from Turkish halâs ‘exemption’, a status name for someone who was exempt from payment of rent or taxes.English (Yorkshire) : variant of Hollows.Possibly an altered spelling of Czech Halas, a nickname for a noisy person, from halas ‘uproar’, from halasit ‘to be noisy’.

  • Mill
  • Surname or Lastname

    Scottish and English

    Mill

    Scottish and English : topographic name for someone who lived near a mill, Middle English mille, milne (Old English myl(e)n, from Latin molina, a derivative of molere ‘to grind’). It was usually in effect an occupational name for a worker at a mill or for the miller himself. The mill, whether powered by water, wind, or (occasionally) animals, was an important center in every medieval settlement; it was normally operated by an agent of the local landowner, and individual peasants were compelled to come to him to have their grain ground into flour, a proportion of the ground grain being kept by the miller by way of payment.English : from a short form of a personal name, probably female, as for example Millicent.

  • Payan
  • Surname or Lastname

    probably Spanish

    Payan

    probably Spanish : unexplained. In Spain this name is mainly found in Andalusia.English : variant spelling of Paine.Southern French : from Latin paganus ‘country dweller’, hence a nickname for a country-born person, or from its later sense of ‘pagan’, ‘heathen’, given to a child not yet baptized. Compare Paine.A Payan, also called Saintonge, from the Saintonge region of France, is documented in Quebec City in 1699.

  • Payas | பயாஸ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Payas | பயாஸ

    Water

  • Halfpenny
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Halfpenny

    English : nickname probably for a tenant whose feudal obligations included a regular payment in cash or kind (for example bread or salt) of a halfpenny.

  • Payodhi | பயோதீ
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Payodhi | பயோதீ

    Sea/ocean

  • Payoshnika | பயோஷ்நீகா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Payoshnika | பயோஷ்நீகா

    The Ganga river

  • Farmer
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Farmer

    English : occupational name from Middle English, Old French ferm(i)er (Late Latin firmarius). The term denoted in the first instance a tax farmer, one who undertook the collection of taxes, revenues, and imposts, paying a fixed (Latin firmus) sum for the proceeds, and only secondarily someone who rented land for the purpose of cultivation; it was not applied to an owner of cultivated land before the 17th century.Irish : Anglicized (part translated) form of Gaelic Mac an Scolóige ‘son of the husbandman’, a rare surname of northern and western Ireland.

  • PAYTAH
  • Male

    Native American

    PAYTAH

    Native American Sioux name PAYTAH means "fire."

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PAY

  • Wage
  • v. t.

    That for which one labors; meed; reward; stipulated payment for service performed; hire; pay; compensation; -- at present generally used in the plural. See Wages.

  • Pay
  • n.

    An equivalent or return for money due, goods purchased, or services performed; salary or wages for work or service; compensation; recompense; payment; hire; as, the pay of a clerk; the pay of a soldier.

  • Payment
  • n.

    The act of paying, or giving compensation; the discharge of a debt or an obligation.

  • Pay
  • v. i.

    Hence, to make or secure suitable return for expense or trouble; to be remunerative or profitable; to be worth the effort or pains required; as, it will pay to ride; it will pay to wait; politeness always pays.

  • Pay
  • v. t.

    To give or offer, without an implied obligation; as, to pay attention; to pay a visit.

  • Vicontiels
  • n. pl.

    Things belonging to the sheriff; especially, farms (called also vicontiel rents) for which the sheriff used to pay rent to the king.

  • Voucher
  • n.

    A book, paper, or document which serves to vouch the truth of accounts, or to confirm and establish facts of any kind; also, any acquittance or receipt showing the payment of a debt; as, the merchant's books are his vouchers for the correctness of his accounts; notes, bonds, receipts, and other writings, are used as vouchers in proving facts.

  • Usance
  • v. t.

    The time, fixed variously by the usage between different countries, when a bill of exchange is payable; as, a bill drawn on London at one usance, or at double usance.

  • Payndemain
  • n.

    The finest and whitest bread made in the Middle Ages; -- called also paynemain, payman.

  • Pay
  • v. i.

    To give a recompense; to make payment, requital, or satisfaction; to discharge a debt.

  • Payor
  • n.

    See Payer.

  • Unpay
  • v. t.

    To undo, take back, or annul, as a payment.

  • Paymaster
  • n.

    One who pays; one who compensates, rewards, or requites; specifically, an officer or agent of a government, a corporation, or an employer, whose duty it is to pay salaries, wages, etc., and keep account of the same.

  • Payer
  • n.

    One who pays; specifically, the person by whom a bill or note has been, or should be, paid.

  • Wage
  • v. t.

    To put upon wages; to hire; to employ; to pay wages to.

  • Paytine
  • n.

    An alkaloid obtained from a white bark resembling that of the cinchona, first brought from Payta, in Peru.

  • Paying
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Pay

  • Pay
  • v. t.

    To satisfy, or content; specifically, to satisfy (another person) for service rendered, property delivered, etc.; to discharge one's obligation to; to make due return to; to compensate; to remunerate; to recompense; to requite; as, to pay workmen or servants.

  • Dead-pay
  • n.

    Pay drawn for soldiers, or others, really dead, whose names are kept on the rolls.

  • Unowed
  • a.

    Not owed; as, to pay money unowed.