What is the name meaning of PIPER. Phrases containing PIPER
See name meanings and uses of PIPER!PIPER
PIPER
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Chinese, English
Flute Player; A Young Dove; Piper
Boy/Male
French
Piper.
Boy/Male
British, English
Piper
Girl/Female
English American
Piper.
Girl/Female
English
Piper.
Boy/Male
English
Piper
Boy/Male
British, English
Bagpipe Player
Surname or Lastname
English and North German
English and North German : from Middle English peper, piper, Middle Low German peper ‘pepper’, hence a metonymic occupational name for a spicer; alternatively, it may be a nickname for a small man (as if the size of a peppercorn) or one with a fiery temper, or for a dark-haired person (from the color of a peppercorn) or anecdotal for someone who paid a peppercorn rent.Americanized form of the Ashkenazic Jewish ornamental name Pfeffer, or Fef(f)er, a cognate, from Yiddish fefer ‘pepper’.Irish : variant of Peppard.
Boy/Male
French
Piper.
Girl/Female
American, British, English
Piper; Pipe Player
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly southern), Dutch, and North German
English (mainly southern), Dutch, and North German : occupational name for a player on the pipes, Middle English pipere, Middle Dutch pi(j)per, Middle Low German piper.Translation of German Pfeiffer, or of the French secondary surname Lefifre.
Male
English
English occupational surname transferred to unisex forename use, derived from Middle English pipere, PIPER means "pipe-player."
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : metonymic occupational name for a piper, from Middle English pipe ‘pipe’ (Old English pīpe). In some cases it may have been a topographic name from the same word in the sense ‘waterpipe’, ‘conduit’, ‘water channel’, or a habitational name from Pipe in Herefordshire or Pipehill in Staffordshire, near Lichfield (earlier Pipa), both named from this word.English (East Anglia) : occasionally from a personal name, Pipe, which is recorded in Domesday Book.
Boy/Male
French
Piper.
PIPER
PIPER
Boy/Male
Irish
Wealthy.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a bank of yew trees, Old English īw, + bank.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Jajwalya | ஜஜà¯à®µà®¾à®²à¯à®¯à®¾Â
Goddess Andal
Boy/Male
Tamil
Ascetic
Boy/Male
Tamil
A cowherd, Name of dynasty
Girl/Female
Tamil
Of the forest
Girl/Female
Indian, Sanskrit
Salty
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu
One who is Worshipped; A Ray of Light
Girl/Female
Muslim
Writer, Stated, Well-defined
Surname or Lastname
Americanized spelling of Dutch Bruin.English
Americanized spelling of Dutch Bruin.English : of uncertain origin; possibly from Old English bryne ‘burning’, i.e. a topographic name for a clearing made by burning.
PIPER
PIPER
PIPER
PIPER
PIPER
n.
A common European gurnard (Trigla lyra), having a large head, with prominent nasal projection, and with large, sharp, opercular spines.
n.
One who plays on a whiffle; a fifer or piper.
n.
A well-known, pungently aromatic condiment, the dried berry, either whole or powdered, of the Piper nigrum.
n.
A colorless crystalline substance, isomeric with piperonal, but having weak acid properties. It is extracted from sandalwood.
n.
A white, silky, crystalline substance extracted from the thick rootstock of a species of pepper (Piper methysticum) of the South Sea Islands; -- called also kanakin.
n.
See Pepper.
n.
A hydrocarbon obtained by decomposition of certain piperidine derivatives.
n.
A white crystalline substance obtained by oxidation of piperic acid, and regarded as a complex aldehyde.
a.
Pertaining to, or derived from, or designating, a complex organic acid found in the products of different members of the Pepper family, and extracted as a yellowish crystalline substance.
n.
A dried berry of the black pepper (Piper nigrum).
n.
A Peruvian plant (Piper, / Artanthe, elongatum), allied to the pepper, the leaves of which are used as a styptic and astringent.
n.
One who plays on a pipe, or the like, esp. on a bagpipe.
n.
An oily liquid alkaloid, C5H11N, having a hot, peppery, ammoniacal odor. It is related to pyridine, and is obtained by the decomposition of piperine.
n.
Same as Pepperidge.
n.
A white crystalline compound of piperidine and piperic acid. It is obtained from the black pepper (Piper nigrum) and other species.
n.
A liquid hydrocarbon of the terpene series extracted from the seeds of a Japanese prickly ash (Xanthoxylum pipertium) as an aromatic oil.
n.
A sea urchin (Goniocidaris hystrix) having very long spines, native of both the American and European coasts.
n.
An aromatic and pungent plant of the genus Mentha (M. piperita), much used in medicine and confectionery.
a.
Of or pertaining to the order of plants (Piperaceae) of which the pepper (Piper nigrum) is the type. There are about a dozen genera and a thousand species, mostly tropical plants with pungent and aromatic qualities.
n.
The plant which yields pepper, an East Indian woody climber (Piper nigrum), with ovate leaves and apetalous flowers in spikes opposite the leaves. The berries are red when ripe. Also, by extension, any one of the several hundred species of the genus Piper, widely dispersed throughout the tropical and subtropical regions of the earth.