What is the name meaning of SHEMUSHI. Phrases containing SHEMUSHI
See name meanings and uses of SHEMUSHI!SHEMUSHI
Creative Filming club, Movie club, Sports club, PaCODEah the Tech Club,Shemushi or the quiz club, Bio-wissen club, Math club, Literary club Physics club
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Tirupati
Journal of the Ganganath Jha, Kendriya Sanskrit Vidyapeeth, Allahabad, 1983. Shemushi, (Ed) Vidya Niwas Mishra, Sharda Niketan, Varanasi, 2000. "Padma Awards"
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Girl/Female
Basque
End.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
River
Girl/Female
American, British, English
God is Gracious; Female Version of Giovanni; Variant of Jovana
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name, from Middle English bakere, Old English bæcere, a derivative of bacan ‘to bake’. It may have been used for someone whose special task in the kitchen of a great house or castle was the baking of bread, but since most humbler households did their own baking in the Middle Ages, it may also have referred to the owner of a communal oven used by the whole village. The right to be in charge of this and exact money or loaves in return for its use was in many parts of the country a hereditary feudal privilege. Compare Miller. Less often the surname may have been acquired by someone noted for baking particularly fine bread or by a baker of pottery or bricks.Americanized form of cognates or equivalents in many other languages, for example German Bäcker, Becker; Dutch Bakker, Bakmann; French Boulanger. For other forms see Hanks and Hodges (1988).Baker was well established as an early immigrant family name in Puritan New England. Among others, two men called Remember Baker (father and son) lived at Woodbury, CT, in the early 17th century, and an Alexander Baker arrived in Boston, MA, in 1635.
Boy/Male
Welsh
Legendary son of Eurosswydd.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian
Happiness
Surname or Lastname
English, French, German, Dutch, Spanish (Simón), Czech and Slovak (Šimon), Slovenian, Hungarian, and Jewish (Ashkenazic)
English, French, German, Dutch, Spanish (Simón), Czech and Slovak (Å imon), Slovenian, Hungarian, and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from the personal name, Hebrew Shim‘on, which is probably derived from the verb sham‘a ‘to hearken’. In the Vulgate and in many vernacular versions of the Old Testament, this is usually rendered Simeon. In the Greek New Testament, however, the name occurs as SimÅn, as a result of assimilation to the pre-existing Greek byname SÄ«mÅn (from sÄ«mos ‘snub-nosed’). Both Simon and Simeon were in use as personal names in western Europe from the Middle Ages onward. In Christendom the former was always more popular, at least in part because of its associations with the apostle Simon Peter, the brother of Andrew. In Britain there was also confusion from an early date with Anglo-Scandinavian forms of Sigmund (see Siegmund), a name whose popularity was reinforced at the Conquest by the Norman form Simund.The earliest documented bearer of the surname Simon in New France came from the Saintonge region of France and was in Montreal by 1655. Another, from Paris, is recorded in Quebec City in 1659 with the secondary surname Lapointe.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Pure, White
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places so named in Gloucestershire and Norfolk or from Blackney Farm in Stoke Abbott, Dorset. The first two are named with Old English blæc, dative blacan ‘black’, ‘dark’ + ēg ‘island’, ‘promontory’; the third is from Old English blæc + hæg ‘enclosure’.
Surname or Lastname
English or Scandinavian
English or Scandinavian : variant spelling of Dalby.
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