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REMA

  • Rema
  • Look up rema in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Rema or REMA may refer to: Rema, Ethiopia, village in Amhara province, Ethiopia Rema Island, an island

    Rema

  • Rema (musician)
  • Divine Joshua Ikubor (born 1 May 2000), known professionally as Rema, is a Nigerian singer-songwriter and rapper. He gained recognition with his 2019 song

    Rema (musician)

  • Reference Elevation Model of Antarctica
  • Antarctica (REMA) is a digital elevation model (DEM) that covers almost the entire continent of Antarctica at a resolution of less than 10 m. REMA uses stereophotogrammetry

    Reference Elevation Model of Antarctica

  • Rema-Rema
  • Rema-Rema were an English post-punk group consisting of Gary Asquith (guitar/vocals), Marco Pirroni (guitar), Michael Allen (bass/vocals), Mark Cox (keyboards)

    Rema-Rema

  • Calm Down (Rema song)
  • "Calm Down" is a song by Nigerian singer Rema, from his debut studio album Rave & Roses (2022). It was released on 11 February 2022 through Jonzing World

    Calm Down (Rema song)

  • REMA 1000
  • REMA 1000 (Bokmål: Rema tusen) is a Norwegian multinational no-frills soft-discount grocery chain owned entirely by REITAN. REMA is a short for Reitan

    REMA 1000

  • Moses Isserles
  • 1530/25 Adar I 5290 – 11 May 1572/18 Iyar 5332), also known by the acronym Rema, was an eminent Polish Ashkenazi rabbi, talmudist, and posek (expert in Jewish

    Moses Isserles

  • Goals (song)
  • Thai rapper and singer Lisa, Brazilian singer Anitta, and Nigerian singer Rema. It was released through SALXCO Records on May 21, 2026, as the sixth single

    Goals (song)

  • Gayatri Rema
  • Gayatri Rema is an Indian actress who has appeared in Tamil language films. After portraying her first major lead role in Touring Talkies (2015), she appeared

    Gayatri Rema

  • Rema discography
  • The discography of Rema, a Nigerian Afrobeats singer, consists of two studio albums, four EP, thirty-nine singles (including two as a featured artist)

    Rema discography

AI search on online names & meanings containing REMA

REMA

  • Rema | ரேமாஂ
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Rema | ரேமாஂ

    Goddess Lakshmi

    Rema | ரேமாஂ

  • Remanika | ரேமாஂநீகா 
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Remanika | ரேமாஂநீகா 

    Remanika | ரேமாஂநீகா 

  • Paine
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Kent and Sussex)

    Paine

    English (mainly Kent and Sussex) : from the Middle English personal name Pain(e), Payn(e) (Old French Paien, from Latin Paganus), introduced to Britain by the Normans. The Latin name is a derivative of pagus ‘outlying village’, and meant at first a person who lived in the country (as opposed to Urbanus ‘city dweller’), then a civilian as opposed to a soldier, and eventually a heathen (one not enrolled in the army of Christ). This remained a popular name throughout the Middle Ages, but it died out in the 16th century.Thomas Payne, who was a freeman of the Plymouth Colony in 1639, was the founder of a large American family, which included Robert Treat Paine (1731–1814), one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The author of the republican treatise The Rights of Man, Thomas Paine (1737–1809), left England for North America in the mid 1770s, where he became involved in the movement that led to independence. His pamphlet of 1776, Common Sense, influenced the Declaration of Independence and furnished some of the arguments justifying it.

    Paine

  • Marlow
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Marlow

    English : habitational name from the place in Buckinghamshire on the Thames, named in Old English with mere ‘lake’, ‘pool’ + lāfe ‘remnants’, ‘leavings’, i.e. a boggy area remaining after a lake had been drained.English : possibly also a variant of Marley.

    Marlow

  • Dodd
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish

    Dodd

    English and Scottish : from the Middle English personal name Dodde, Dudde, Old English Dodda, Dudda, which remained in fairly widespread and frequent use in England until the 14th century. It seems to have been originally a byname, but the meaning is not clear; it may come from a Germanic root used to describe something round and lumpish—hence a short, plump man.Irish : of English origin, taken to Sligo in the 16th century by a Shropshire family; also sometimes adopted by bearers of the Gaelic name Ó Dubhda (see Dowd).Daniel and Mary Dod, natives of England, emigrated to Branford, CT, in about 1645.

    Dodd

  • Womack
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Womack

    English : unexplained. The surname is well established in England (Yorkshire and Norfolk) as well as North America, and there is a Womack Water in Norfolk, but the name remains unexplained. It may possibly be connected with Dutch Walmack, from Middle Dutch walmac(k)e ‘twig’, ‘faggot’, applied as a nickname for a thin person.

    Womack

  • Tester
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Tester

    English : nickname from Old French testard, a pejorative derivative of teste ‘head’ (see Testa).German : from Latin testa ‘head’, hence a nickname for someone with a large or otherwise remarkable head, or, especially in Bavaria, a topographic name for someone who lived at one end of a village or a row of fields, from the same word.German : metonymic occupational name for a silver smelter, from Bavarian test ‘furnace for refining silver’.

    Tester

  • Witt
  • Surname or Lastname

    North German

    Witt

    North German : nickname for someone with white hair or a remarkably pale complexion, from a Middle Low German witte ‘white’.South German : from a short form of the old German personal name Wittigo.English : variant of White.

    Witt

  • Hamdast |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Hamdast |

    Friend, One who remains close

    Hamdast |

  • Grime
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Grime

    English : from the Old Norse personal name Grímr, which remained popular as a personal name in the form Grim in Anglo-Scandinavian areas well into the 12th century. It was a byname of Woden with the meaning ‘masked person’ or ‘shape-changer’, and may have been bestowed on male children in an attempt to secure the protection of the god. The Continental Germanic cognate grīm was also used as a first element in compound names. Compare Grimaud and Gribble, with the original sense ‘mask’, ‘helmet’. Some examples of the surname may derive from short forms of such names.

    Grime

  • Chance
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Chance

    English : from Old French chea(u)nce ‘(good) fortune’ (a derivative of cheoir ‘to fall (out)’, Latin cadere), a nickname for an inveterate gambler, for someone considered fortunate or well favored, or perhaps for someone who had survived an accident by a remarkable piece of luck.Americanized form of German Tschantz or Schantz.

    Chance

  • Chambers
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Chambers

    English : occupational name for someone who was employed in the private living quarters of his master, rather than in the public halls of the manor. The name represents a genitive or plural form of Middle English cha(u)mbre ‘chamber’, ‘room’ (Latin camera), and is synonymous in origin with Chamberlain, but as that office rose in the social scale, this term remained reserved for more humble servants of the bedchamber.

    Chambers

  • Grant
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and (especially) Scottish (of Norman origin), and French

    Grant

    English and (especially) Scottish (of Norman origin), and French : nickname from Anglo-Norman French graund, graunt ‘tall’, ‘large’ (Old French grand, grant, from Latin grandis), given either to a person of remarkable size, or else in a relative way to distinguish two bearers of the same personal name, often representatives of different generations within the same family.English and Scottish : from a medieval personal name, probably a survival into Middle English of the Old English byname Granta (see Grantham).Probably a respelling of German Grandt or Grand.The U.S. president General Ulysses S. Grant (1822–85), born in OH, was the descendant of a Puritan called Matthew Grant, who landed in Massachusetts with his wife, Priscilla, in 1630. This family of Grants continued in New England until Captain Noah Grant, having served throughout the Revolution, emigrated to PA in 1790 and later to OH.

    Grant

  • Lovely
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Lovely

    English : nickname for an amiable person, also perhaps sometimes given in an ironical sense, from Middle English luvelich, loveli (Old English luflic). During the main period of surname formation the word was used in an active sense, ‘loving’, ‘kind’, ‘affectionate’, as well as the passive ‘lovable’, ‘worthy of love’. The meaning ‘attractive’, ‘beautiful’ is not clearly attested before the 14th century, and remained rare throughout the Middle Ages.New England Americanized form of French Lavallée (see Lavallee) or a similar name.

    Lovely

  • Priest
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly West Midlands)

    Priest

    English (mainly West Midlands) : from Middle English pr(i)est ‘minister of the Church’ (Old English prēost, from Latin presbyter, Greek presbyteros ‘elder’, ‘counselor’, comparative of presbys ‘old man’), used as a nickname, either for someone with a pious manner or possibly for someone who had played the part of a priest in a pageant. It may also have been an occupational name for someone in the service of a priest, and occasionally it may have been used to denote someone suspected of being the son of a priest.A John Priest is recorded as being in Woburn, MA, as early as 1675. The Mayflower Pilgrim Digory Priest of Holland died the first winter at Plymouth in 1620, leaving behind a widow who remarried and two daughters, who did not pass on the family name.

    Priest

  • Morant
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, French, and German

    Morant

    English, French, and German : from an Old French personal name of uncertain etymology. It appears to be a byname meaning ‘steadfast’, ‘enduring’, from the present participle of Old French (de)morer ‘to remain or stay’, but this may be no more than the reworking under the influence of folk etymology of a Germanic personal name. The later may be from the elements mōd ‘courage’ + hramn ‘raven’. Another possibility is derivation from Latin Maurus + suffix -andus (following the pattern of names formed from a verbal noun, such as Amandus).French : habitational name, a variant of Morand.

    Morant

  • Swasey
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Swasey

    English : unexplained. Possibly an Anglicized form of Dutch Swijse(n), variant of Wijs ‘wise’ (see Wise).The name was brought to North America by John Swasey, a Quaker who came from England to Salem, MA, with two sons, John and Joseph, in or before 1640. Banished from Salem because of his religious beliefs, he moved first to Setauket, Long Island, NY, and subsequently to Southold, Long Island. His son Joseph remained in MA and inherited his estate at Salem.

    Swasey

  • Manners
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (of Norman origin)

    Manners

    English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Mesnières in Seine-Maritime, recorded in the 13th century as Maneria, a derivative of Latin manere ‘to remain, abide, reside’. See also Menzies.

    Manners

  • Reman | ரேமாந
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Reman | ரேமாந

    Reman | ரேமாந

  • Test
  • Surname or Lastname

    Jewish (Ashkenazic)

    Test

    Jewish (Ashkenazic) : metonymic occupational name for a refiner, from Yiddish test ‘crucible’, ‘melting pot’.English : nickname for someone with a large or otherwise remarkable head, from Old French teste ‘head’.

    Test

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REMA

Follow users with usernames @REMA or posting hashtags containing #REMA

REMA

Online names & meanings

  • Hataway
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hataway

    English : variant of Hathaway.

  • Witts
  • Surname or Lastname

    Dutch

    Witts

    Dutch : patronymic from the Germanic personal name Wido.English : patronymic from Witt.Probably an Americanized spelling of German Witz, cognate with 1.

  • Eswar
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Eswar

    Lord Shiva

  • ZADOK
  • Male

    English

    ZADOK

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Tsadowq, ZADOK means "just, righteous." In the bible, this is the name of many characters, including a high priest of Israel.

  • NJÁLL
  • Male

    Icelandic

    NJÁLL

    Icelandic form of Norwegian Njål, NJÁLL means "champion."

  • Naambhagat
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Naambhagat

    Devotee of the Lord

  • Baiardo
  • Boy/Male

    Basque, British, English, German, Italian

    Baiardo

    Brown Hair

  • Neelamjot
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Neelamjot

    Light of Sapphire

  • Eknath
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Eknath

    Poet, Saint

  • KATHRYN
  • Female

    English

    KATHRYN

     Variant spelling of English Katherine, KATHRYN means "pure."

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REMA

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REMA

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REMA

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Other words and meanings similar to

REMA

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing REMA

REMA

  • Remainder-man
  • n.

    One who has an estate after a particular estate is determined. See Remainder, n., 3.

  • Remanded
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Remand

  • Remarking
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Remark

  • Remark
  • n.

    The expression, in speech or writing, of something remarked or noticed; the mention of that which is worthy of attention or notice; hence, also, a casual observation, comment, or statement; as, a pertinent remark.

  • Remark
  • n.

    Act of remarking or attentively noticing; notice or observation.

  • Remanency
  • a.

    The state of being remanent; continuance; permanence.

  • Remainder
  • a.

    Remaining; left; left over; refuse.

  • Remanence
  • a.

    Alt. of Remanency

  • Remanding
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Remand

  • Remarkable
  • a.

    Worthy of being remarked or noticed; noticeable; conspicuous; hence, uncommon; extraordinary.

  • Remand
  • n.

    The act of remanding; the order for recommitment.

  • Remarked
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Remark

  • Remanent
  • a.

    That which remains; a remnant; a residue.

  • Remanent
  • a.

    Remaining; residual.

  • Remark
  • n.

    To express in words or writing, as observed or noticed; to state; to say; -- often with a substantive clause; as, he remarked that it was time to go.

  • Remarker
  • n.

    One who remarks.

  • Remark
  • n.

    To take notice of, or to observe, mentally; as, to remark the manner of a speaker.

  • Remainder-men
  • pl.

    of Remainder-man

  • Remandment
  • n.

    A remand.

  • Remark
  • v. i.

    To make a remark or remarks; to comment.