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Cassava biscuits
Avoador, often referred to as the generic name biscoito de polvilho and also known as biscoito de vento (air biscuit), peta, or biscoito voador (flying
Avoador
Municipality in Southeast, Brazil
production of sausages, honey, coffee, sweets, biscuits, bread, requeijão, and avoador, among other homemade foods. At times, the municipality's artisanal production
Santana_do_Paraíso
Municipality of Bahia, Brazil
distinguished by locally produced foods. Breakfast in Paratinga often includes the avoador, a white biscuit made from flour, which is a highlight of local harvests
Paratinga
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Girl/Female
Arabic
Forehead
Boy/Male
Muslim
One who increases in greatness
Surname or Lastname
English
English : perhaps an occupational name for a maker of bottles or cups, from Old French gourde ‘water vessel’, ‘flask’, but possibly of the same derivation as 2.French : from Old French gourd ‘heavy’, ‘dull’, ‘sluggish’, hence a nickname for a slow lumbering person.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Garland of rays
Boy/Male
African, Hindu, Indian, Thai
From the Brook
Boy/Male
Hebrew American Welsh English
Cherished; Beloved.
Girl/Female
Buddhist, Indian
Unique
Boy/Male
German
Horse mighty.
Girl/Female
Irish
The name comes from fionn + ghuala “fair shouldered.†The chieftan King Lir and his wife Aobh had a daughter Fionnoula and three sons Aedh, Conn and Fiachra. When Aodh died Lir’s new wife Aoife was so jealous of her husband’s love for his children that she cast a spell on them and turned them into swans and condemned them to spend 300 years on Lake Daravarragh, 300 years on the Sea of Moyle and 300 years on Innis Glora. However, if they heard a Christian bell in Ireland they would become people again. One morning they were awakened by the sound of a Mass bell. St. Patrick had arrived. The children were brought to him and he baptised them and they have lived on in Irish mythology as the “Children of Lir†(read the legend).
Female
German
 Medieval German short form of Teutonic Mechthild, MAUD means "mighty in battle." Compare with another form of Maud.
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