Search references for ERMAL PEI. Phrases containing ERMAL PEI
See searches and references containing ERMAL PEI!ERMAL PEI
ERMAL PEI
Surname or Lastname
German
German : habitational name for someone from Posa or Poserna, south of Merseburg, or a variant of Pose (see Posey).English : variant of Peiser.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English, Old French peinto(u)r, oblique case of peintre ‘painter’, hence an occupational name for a painter (normally of colored glass). In the Middle Ages the walls of both great and minor churches were covered with painted decorations, and Reaney and Wilson note that in 1308 Hugh le Peyntour and Peter the Pavier were employed ‘making and painting the pavement’ at St. Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster. The name is widespread in central and southern England.German : topographic name for someone living in a fenced enclosure (see Bainter).
Female
Scottish
Pet form of Scottish Maighread, PEIGI means "pearl."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a hill with a sharp point, from Old English pīc ‘point’, ‘hill’, which was a relatively common place name element.English : metonymic occupational name for a pike fisherman or nickname for a predatory individual, from Middle English pike.English : metonymic occupational name for a user of a pointed tool for breaking up the earth, Middle English pike. Compare Pick.English : metonymic occupational name for a medieval foot soldier who used a pike, a weapon consisting of a sharp pointed metal end on a long pole, Middle English pic (Old French pique, of Germanic origin).English : nickname for a tall, thin person, from a transferred sense of one of the above.English : from a Germanic personal name (derived from the root ‘sharp’, ‘pointed’), found in Middle English and Old French as Pic.English : nickname from Old French pic ‘woodpecker’, Latin picus. Compare Pye and Speight.Irish : in the south, of English origin; in Ulster a variant Anglicization of Gaelic Mac Péice (see McPeake).Americanized spelling of German Peik, from Middle Low German pēk ‘sharp, pointed tool or weapon’. Compare 4 above or from a Germanic personal name (see 6 above).John Pike brought his family to Boston from England in 1635 and settled in Newbury, MA. His son Robert was a leading citizen and a vigorous defender of civil and religious liberty in colonial MA.
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from Middle English pine, Old French pin, a topographic name for someone who lived by a conspicuous pine tree or in a pine forest. It may also be a Norman habitational name from any of various places named with this word, such as Le Pin in Calvados; in other cases it may originally have been a nickname for a tall man, one thought to resemble a pine tree.German : variant spelling of Peine.
Boy/Male
Indian, Turkish
Friend; God
Girl/Female
Gaelic
Peg.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Pierce.The name Peirce first appears in colonial American records in 1623 with William Peirce, an English shipmaster who compiled the first almanac in English America.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name for someone from Poitou, Anglo-Norman French Peitow.Hungarian (Pető) : from a pet form of the personal name Péter, Hungarian form of Peter.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Peiser.
Surname or Lastname
English and North German
English and North German : occupational name for a maker of pins or pegs (or alternatively, in the case of the German name, a metonymic occupational name for a shoemaker), a derivative of Pinn, with the addition of the agent suffix -er.English : occupational name for a maker or user of combs, Anglo-Norman French peigner, an agent derivative of peigne ‘comb’.English : habitational name from Pinner, now part of northwest London, which derives its name from Old English pinn ‘pin’, ‘peg’ + Åra ‘slope’, ‘ridge’, describing a projecting hill spur.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : habitational name for someone from Pinne (Polish Pniewy) near PoznaÅ„.German : habitational name for someone from a place called Pinnan or Pinne.
Surname or Lastname
German (of Slavic origin)
German (of Slavic origin) : habitational name for someone from a place called Peise near Königsberg in former East Prussia (present name: Kaliningrad, an exclave of Russia).German (of Slavic origin) : occupational name from a derivative of Polish pisarz ‘scribe’, ‘clerk’ or a cognate in some other Slavic language.German : variant of Beiser.English : variant spelling of Peyser.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Pierson.
Girl/Female
Latin
Lover of Poseidon.
Girl/Female
American, Australian, Christian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Latin, Swedish, Teutonic
Universal; Whole; Form of Irma; God of War; Work; Complete; War Goddess; Earthly; Warrior; Entire
Girl/Female
German American Teutonic
Complete. War goddess.
Female
English
Variant spelling of German Irma, ERMA means "entire, whole."
Boy/Male
Welsh
Legendary son of peibyn.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English pyion, peion ‘young bird’, ‘young pigeon’ (from Old French pijon), a metonymic occupational name for a hunter of wood pigeons or a nickname for a foolish or gullible person, since the birds were easily taken.English : altered form of the nickname Pet(y)jon (see Pettyjohn).Irish (County Monaghan) : local form of McGuigan, from Gaelic Mac Uiginn ‘son of the Viking’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Anglo-Norman French peiser, poiser ‘weigher’ (Late Latin pensarius, a derivative of pensare ‘to weigh’), hence an occupational name for an official in charge of weights and measures, especially one whose duty it was to weigh rent or tribute received.German : variant spelling of Peiser.
ERMAL PEI
ERMAL PEI
Boy/Male
Finnish, German, Irish
Morning; Great; Dawn
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada
Victory
Male
Portuguese
Portuguese form of Hebrew Adam, ADÃO means "earth" or "red."
Girl/Female
Biblical
Punishment, correction.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Embarrassment
Girl/Female
German
Armed Warrior Woman
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Grown; Increased; Evolved
Boy/Male
Biblical
The only Lord.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Delighting in the Gods; Pious; Religious
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Water
ERMAL PEI
ERMAL PEI
ERMAL PEI
ERMAL PEI
ERMAL PEI
n.
See Peen.
a.
Pertaining to the dermis; dermal.
a.
Pertaining to the integument or skin of animals; dermic; as, the dermal secretions.
n.
One of the peculiar dermal appendages, of several kinds, belonging to birds, as contour feathers, quills, and down.
n.
See Peytrel.
n. pl.
An order of reptiles, including the tortoises and turtles, peculiar in having a part of the vertebrae, ribs, and sternum united with the dermal plates so as to form a firm shell. The jaws are covered by a horny beak. See Reptilia; also, Illust. in Appendix.
a.
Pertaining to, or in relation with, both dermal and neural structures; as, the dermoneural spines or dorsal fin rays of fishes.
n. pl.
An extinct order of ganoid fishes. They had a compressed body, covered with dermal ribs (pleurolepida) and with enameled rhomboidal scales.
v. t.
To poise or weight.
n.
A genus of large Jurassic dinosaurs remarkable for a powerful dermal armature of plates and spines.
a.
Pertaining to the dermis or true skin.
a.
Fitted for trail or test; experimental; tentative; treating of attempts.
n.
The breastplate of a horse's armor or harness. [Spelt also peitrel.] See Poitrel.
a.
Pertaining to, or in relation with, both dermal and haemal structures; as, the dermohaemal spines or ventral fin rays of fishes.
n.
A weight; a poise.
n.
A dynamometer for measuring the force required to draw wheel carriages on roads of different constructions.
n.
One of the small, thin, membranous, bony or horny pieces which form the covering of many fishes and reptiles, and some mammals, belonging to the dermal part of the skeleton, or dermoskeleton. See Cycloid, Ctenoid, and Ganoid.
n.
A genus of slender, transparent holothurians which have delicate calcareous anchors attached to the dermal plates. See Illustration in Appendix.