Search references for MATERICE. Phrases containing MATERICE
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Christmas tradition among Croats and Serbs
Materice (also known as Majčice and Majke nebeske) is a tradition at the third Sunday of Advent. It is found among Croatian Catholics in Dalmatia, among
Materice
Serbian customs and practices
holidays are called Detinjci or Djetinjci, Materice, and Oci. Children give gifts on Detinjci, married women on Materice, and married men on Oci. The best presents
Christmas_in_Serbia
Court before King Peter II Karađorđević in 1939, on the occasion of the Materice holiday, with the entire ceremony broadcast live by Radio Belgrade. Although
Mirko_Šouc
Barrow in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
evasit, et in vicum cum insigni se praeda recepit. Denique hoc vasculum materice incognitas, coloris insoliti, et formae inusitatae, Henrico seniori Anglorum
Willy_Howe
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Surname or Lastname
English (Yorkshire)
English (Yorkshire) : unexplained. Compare Hutchcraft.
Girl/Female
Bengali, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Tamil, Telugu
Lake
Girl/Female
Muslim
Seeing, Viewing, Looking, Dream, Vision
Girl/Female
Tamil
Lightening, Ravi river
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Bridge of Relations; Godess Durga
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Radiating Heat
Boy/Male
Hebrew
White.
Female
German
Feminine form of German Wiebe, WIEBKE means "war."
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : metonymic occupational name for a maker of hoods or a nickname for someone who wore a distinctive hood, from Middle English hod(de), hood, hud ‘hood’. Some early examples with prepositions seem to be topographic names, referring to a place where there was a hood-shaped hill or a natural shelter or overhang, providing protection from the elements. In some cases the name may be habitational, from places called Hood, in Devon (possibly ‘hood-shaped hill’) and North Yorkshire (possibly ‘shelter’ or ‘fortification’).Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hUid ‘descendant of Ud’, a personal name of uncertain derivation. This was the name of an Ulster family who were bards to the O’Neills of Clandeboy. It was later altered to Mac hUid. Compare Mahood.
Boy/Male
Aramaic
Ploughman.
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