Search references for YAST. Phrases containing YAST
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Installation and configuration tool by SUSE
YaST (Yet another Setup Tool) is a Linux operating system setup and configuration tool. YaST is featured in the openSUSE Linux distribution, as well as
YaST
Community-supported Linux distribution
the project creates a variety of related tools, such as Agama, Myrlyn, YaST, Open Build Service, openQA, Snapper, Portus, KIWI, and OSEM. In the past
OpenSUSE
2025 Indian TV series
murders linked to a secret cult, the Aayastis, and a mythical entity called Yast. The series stars Vaani Kapoor, Vaibhav Raj Gupta, Surveen Chawla, Raghubir
Mandala_Murders
Zoroastrian religious term
the Ahurani in Yasna 68. MacKenzie 1971, p. 97: "yašt [yst!] prayer, worship". Hintze 2014a, "YAŠTS, the group of 21 Avestan hymns in praise of various
Yasht
Linux distribution
Agama Cockpit Myrlyn YaST Control Center YaST is the configuration tool in the SUSE Linux distributions, up to and including SLE 15. YaST is an installation
SUSE_Linux_Enterprise
Linux package management library
libzypp; "Zen / YaST Packages Patches Patterns Products") is a package manager engine that powers Linux applications like Myrlyn, YaST, Zypper and the
ZYpp
Zoroastrian religious hymn
Boyce 2000a, "FRAWARDĪN YAŠT[:] the thirteenth of the Zoroastrian yašts". Boyce 2000a, " It is accounted one of the eight great yašts, and is the longest
Frawardin_Yasht
Sahasranama Antonio Panaino, The lists of names of Ahura Mazdā (Yašt I) and Vayu (Yašt XV), 2002, p. 20. "PersianDNA [101 NAMES] Holy names of the Lord
Names of God in Zoroastrianism
Names_of_God_in_Zoroastrianism
Zoroastrian religious hymn
"Yašt 15, the Yašt dedicated to Vāyu, actually bears the Pahlavi title Rām Yašt, even though the minor deity Rāman is nowhere mentioned in the Yašt".
Ram_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
commentary. Darmesteter 1892. Hintze 2014a. Darmesteter 1883, p. 119: "This Yast, one of the longest of the Avesta and one of the most interesting in a literary
Mihr_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
copies thus explicitly call the Yašt 11 Srōš yašt hādōxt, thus distinguishing it from Srōš yašt se šabag "Srōš yašt of the three nights" (Y. 57)". Kellens
Srosh_Yasht
Zoroastrian compendium of sacred literature
Huspāram, the Sakātum, the Juddēwdād, the Čihrdād and the Bagān Yašt. The Bagān Yašt contained most of the Yashts of the extant Avesta (see below), whereas
Avesta
Zoroastrian religious hymn
made up of verses from the [Aban] yašt". Malandra 2000, chap. Aban Niyāyišn. Boyce 1982a, "In living usage the Ābān Yašt is never recited in a fire temple
Aban_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
order to lend this a suitably Yašt-like feel, it was prefixed with a frašna fragment whose lines contain echoes of other Yašts (Yts.1, 8 and 19 22 ).l". König
Rashn_Yasht
Collection of Zoroastrian hymns
p. 60. Skjærvø 2021, "The Yashts (Yašts) are Young Avestan hymns to individual deities.". Hintze 2014, "[E]ach Yašt [...] can be recited by any member
Yashts
Zoroastrian divinity of covenant, light, and oath
AVESTA: Niyayeshes (Litanies)". avesta.org. Hintze, Almut (2014). "Mihr Yašt". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 4 July 2022.. Lecoq 2016, p. 78-82. sfn
Mithra
Zoroastrian religious ceremony
by different authors as Vishtasp Yasht, Wishtasp Yasht, Vištāsp Yašt or Wištāsp Yašt. Here, the first term refers to Vishtaspa, an important figure in
Vishtasp_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
those yašts composed at a late date". Hintze 2014, "'Minor' or 'apotropaic' Yašts[:] 3 (see ARDWAHIŠT YAŠT)". Hintze 2014, "Other common hymns are Yašts 2
Ardwahisht_Yasht
(1994). Zamyād Yašt: Text, Translation, Glossary. Wiesbaden: Dr Ludwig Reichert Verlag. ISBN 9783882267853. — (1994). Der Zamyād-Yašt: Edition, Übersetzung
Almut_Hintze
Zoroastrian religious hymn
connected with the Tištar Yašt". Darmesteter 1883, p. 310: "It is a mere supplement to that Yast". Darmesteter 1883, p. 310: "This Yast ought to follow immediately
Vanand_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
1987, "The yašt is quite short (only nine verses including the holy formulas". Hintze 2014, "Minor or apotropaic Yašts [...] 18 (see ĀŠTĀD YAŠT)". König
Ashtad_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
1986, "With its sixty-two verses, Ard Yašt belongs to the shorter of the “great, old” yašts". Skjærvø 1986, "Ard Yašt is quite outstanding [...] for its
Ard_Yasht
Platform for distributing application software
compiled instead of executables). In 1996, the SUSE Linux distribution has YaST as frontend for its own software packages. Mandriva Linux has urpmi with
App_store
Zoroastrian religious hymn
" The four Bundahišn chapters are evidence of a lost Avestan pre-Zamyād Yašt.". Yarshater 1983, p. 437. Hintze 2014, " “We worship the mighty Glory belonging
Zamyad_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious literature
the Rivayats, the name is given as Baḡān yašt and Bayān yašt. In the Denkard, however, it is given as Baḡān yašt or Baḡān yasn. While yasht or yasn is derived
Bagan_yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
Press. Panaino, Antonio (2002). The Lists of Names of Ahura Mazdā (Yašt I) and Vayu (Yašt XV). Serie orientale Roma. Vol. XCIV. Roma: Istituto italiano per
Ohrmazd_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
2000, "As literature, the Yašt has little to recommend itself". Hintze 2014, "‘Minor’ or ‘apotropaic’ Yašts [...] 7 (see MĀH YAŠT)". Malandra 2000, "stanzas
Mah_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
composition. Darmesteter 1892. Panaino 2002, "HAFT AMAHRASPAND YAŠT or simply Haf-tān yašt, the second hymn of the Avestan corpus. It is dedicated to the
Haft_Amahraspand_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
Kotwal & Hintze 2008, p. 2: "The remaining five Yašts 2–4 and 20–21, which do not belong to the Bayān Yašt Nask, are culled from other Nasks". König 2015
Hordad_Yasht
Zoroastrian concept of a personal spirit of an individual
(2001b), "Frawardīn Yašt", Encyclopedia Iranica, vol. 10, Costa Mesa: Mazda, pp. 199–201. Malandra, William (1971), The Fravaši Yašt, Ann Arbor: University
Fravashi
Zoroastrian religious hymn
2004, "[N]either Yašts 20 (Hōm) nor 21 (Vanant) have a name day". Malandra 2004, "Some of the days may have been associated with a Yašt for deliberate,
Hom_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious text
gibt es fUr einige der Amasha Spantas keinen besonderen Yäst, sondern an 2. Stelle steht der Yäst an die sieben Amasha Spantas". Lommel 1927, pp. 4-5: "Sodann
Sih-rozag
File holding settings for a computer program
standard tool, but operating systems may provide graphical interfaces such as YaST or debconf. Some computer programs only read their configuration files at
Configuration_file
Zoroastrian religious hymn
Darmesteter 1892. Malandra 2002, "GŌŠ YAŠT: the title of the ninth Yašt of the Avesta, also known as Drwāsp Yašt, after the goddess Druuāspā (see DRVĀSPĀ)
Gosh_Yasht
Liturgical language of Zoroastrianism originating in the Old Iranian period
Avestan sections of the Yasna, Visperad, Vidēvdād, and Khorde Avesta, the Yašts were produced throughout the Old Iranian period in the oral culture of priestly
Avestan
Open-source software company
created by Florian La Roche, who joined the S.u.S.E. team. He began to develop YaST, the installer and configuration tool that would become the central point
SUSE_S.A.
Zoroastrian collection of texts within the Avesta
divided in sections and intercalated between the Old Avestan texts[:] the Yašt ī Wisperad abāg Vidēvdād". Cantera 2022, p. 216: "[O]nly the Vīdēvdād is
Vendidad
2021 studio album by Geese
writing, recording Dan Carey – mixing Bernie Grundman – mastering Landon Yast – cover art Piotr Lapinski – additional artwork UNDERCARD - design Matt de
Projector_(Geese_album)
Zoroastrian religious hymn
hymns Yt. 8 (Tištar; see TIŠTRYA), 10 (see MIHR YAŠT), 11 (Srōš), 12 (see RAŠN YAŠT), 13 (see FRAWARDĪN YAŠT) and 14 (Bahrām)". Malandra 2014, "It too is
Srosh_Yasht_Hadoxt
Grammatical mood rarely found in Sanskrit, expressing a blessing or wish
benedictive endings are identical to the corresponding optative endings (-yāst turns into -yāt for the third person, and -yāss into yās for the second person)
Benedictive_mood
ISBN 9783828864887. Antonio Panaino, The lists of names of Ahura Mazdā (Yašt I) and Vayu (Yašt XV), 2002, p. 20. Pashaura Singh (2014), in The Oxford Handbook
Names_of_God
Zoroastrian religious hymn
Old Iranian astral divine being (yazata-), to whom the eighth hymn (Tištar Yašt) of the Later Avestan corpus was dedicated". Panaino 2005, p. 17: "The eighth
Tishtar_Yasht
processor – World Wide Web – WYSIWYG X Window System – X86 – Xmouse Yacc – YaST – Yet another – Yorick Z notation – Z shell – Zilog Z80 – Zooming User Interface
Index_of_computing_articles
Zoroastrian religious hymn
the Yašts: The Case of Yašts 6 and 7". Iranian Studies. 45 (2): 261–273. doi:10.1080/00210862.2011.617161. Panaino, Antonio (1990). Xwaršēd e Māh Yašt: Gli
Xwarshed_Yasht
Zoroastrian religious hymn
rarely discussed hymn: Yašt 14". Darmesteter 1883, p. 231: "IV (§§ 47-64). The glorification of Verethraghna". Hintze 2014, "[T]he Yašts were produced throughout
Bahram_Yasht
Text-based user interface API
themselves. Others, such as GNU Midnight Commander and Yet another Setup Tool (YaST), use the curses programming interface. Free and open-source software portal
Ncurses
Zoroastrian religious text
seems to maintain the original distribution: the wistasp yast is the designation of the yast, the long liturgy, and wistasp sast is the intercalated text
Vishtasp_Sast
Free and open-source command-line package management utility
use YUM directly, SUSE Linux 10.1 added support for YUM repositories in YaST, and the Open Build Service repositories use the YUM XML repository format
Yum_(software)
Iranian mythological bird
is also associated with the waters of Vourukasha (Yasht 19.51, 56–57). In Yašt 12.17 Simorgh's (Saēna's) tree stands in the middle of the sea Vourukaša
Simurgh
Historical region in Central Asia
character". Hostility between Tuirya and Airya is indicated also in the Farvardtn Yast (vv. 37-8), where the Fravashis of the Just are said to have provided support
Turan
Implementation of the X Window System
(if not all) settings (such as Red Hat Linux and Fedora's Anaconda, SuSE's YaST and Mandrake Linux). The project began in 1992 when David Wexelblat, Glenn
XFree86
Ethnic group from the early history of the Iranian peoples
of warrior-heroes, the fravašis proper". Malandra 2018, p. 35: "Since our Yašt is divided into two basic parts, the one being sst. 1–95 dealing in a more
Turya_(Avesta)
Compilation of the geographical references in Avesta
geographical description in the Avesta, several of the Yashts (Avestan: yašt, 'prayer, honor') contain additional information. Of particular interest
Avestan_geography
Divine mystical power in Iranian thought
i. Myth of Jamšid". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 4 December 2025. In Yašt 19.30-34, the wanderings of the Fortune of the kauuis are described and,
Khvarenah
Zoroastrian religious text
169: " In Chap. I, 9, 12 it is called Stod-yast, 'praise-ritual', (Av. staota yesnya); and Stud-yast, or Yast, in the Rivayats, which also state that it
Staota_Yesnya
zip Yes ? ? openSUSE Free, and nonfree 42,236 with PackMan 34,000 YaST, Zypper RPM YaST Yes Yes ? OpenWrt Free, and nonfree 2,000 ? opkg .ipk - No ? ? Parabola
Comparison of Linux distributions
Comparison_of_Linux_distributions
Ancient Roman goddess of marriage and childbirth
great mythic river, does she bear the same three valences explicitly: her Yašt states she is invoked by warriors, by clerics and by deliverers. She bestows
Juno_(mythology)
Vedic ritual drink
Zoroastrianism may be glimpsed from the Avesta (particularly in the Hōm Yast, Yasna 9), and Avestan language *hauma also survived as Middle Persian hōm
Soma_(drink)
Mythical king and hero of Turan
mythical and legendary history of the Iranian people as related in the Yašts largely agrees with that of the Persian epic, especially Ferdowsī’s Šāh-nāma"
Afrasiab
Logical volume management system
15 December 2025. Retrieved 14 March 2026. "7.1.2 LVM Configuration with YaST". SUSE. 12 July 2011. Archived from the original on 25 July 2015. Retrieved
Logical Volume Manager (Linux)
Logical_Volume_Manager_(Linux)
Personification of the "destructive spirit" in Zoroastrianism
Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente. pp. 85–99. Hintze, Almut (1994). The Zamyād Yašt: Introduction, Text and Translation. Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag. pp. 45–58
Ahriman
stanzas of the Yašt". Malandra 2000a, " except for stanzas 10 and 11, which are omitted in a number of Mss but are found also in the Wištāsp Yašt 6-7". Malandra
Niyayishn
Zoroastrian religious text
Introduction. Porro 2020. Cantera 2013, p. 86: "The Widewdad and the Wistasp Yast ceremonies as they appear in the manuscripts are basically a Wisperad ceremony
Wishtasp-sast_nask
Avestan language name of Zoroastrianism's demon of drought
Zoroastrianism, New York: OUP, pp. 374/Tishtrya, 404–405/Aposh Lommel, Herman (1927), Die Yašts des Awesta, Göttingen-Leipzig: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht/JC Hinrichs
Apaosha
Zoroastrian religious texts
types[:] Yašt manuscripts, that is, collections of the hymns or Yašts". Andrés-Toledo 2015a, p. 521: "Although the Khorde Avesta incorporates certain Yašts in
Khordeh_Avesta
Legendary mountain in the Avesta
Hymn to Mithra. Cambridge University Press. Hintze, Almut (2014). "MIHR YAŠT". Encyclopædia Iranica. Iranica Foundation. Houtsma, Martijn Theodoor (1987)
Hara_Berezaiti
Zoroastrian religious hymn
only in Yt. 16, which is dedicated to her although it is known as the Dēn yašt". Benveniste & Renou 1934, p. 57: "Cette absorption de Cista par Dainà était
Den_Yasht
Zoroastrian sacred plant and drink
the epitome of the quintessence of the haoma plant, venerated in the Hōm Yašt, the hymns of Yasna 9–11. In those hymns, Haoma is said to appear before
Haoma
Zoroastrian religious hymn
11 Hōm Yašt. Y. 11 concludes with blessings and curse and other prayers.". Boyce 2003. Lommel 1927, p. 187: "Am meisten den Charakter der Yäst's hat Yasna
Hom_Stom
English translations of Asian religious texts (1879–1910 Max Müller, editor)
1880 5 Pahlavi Texts, part 1/5: Bundahis selections of Zâd-sparam Bahman Yast Shâyast lâ-Shâyast Zor E. W. West 1880 6 Qur'an part 1/2 – chapters I-XVI
Sacred_Books_of_the_East
Belgian Iranian studies professor (b. 1944)
noms-racines de l'Avesta, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1974. Fravardin Yašt (Yt 13, 1-70), Wiesbaden, 1975. Le verbe avestique, Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag
Jean_Kellens
Zoroastrian religious ceremony
p. 27: "drón [dlwn' N darūn] consecrated bread". MacKenzie 1971, p. 97: "yašt [yst!] prayer, worship". Cantera 2020, p. 205. Karanjia 2004, p. 403. Redard
Dron_Yasht
Ancient Iranian civilization (6th century BCE – 11th century CE)
records of the name of Sogdiana (Soḡd) are found in the Avesta (Vendīdād, 1.4; Yašt 10.14; the by-name of Sogdian lands in the Avesta is Gauua[.]". Vogelsang
Sogdia
Early history of the Iranian peoples
Avestan sections of the Yasna, Visperad, Vidēvdād, and Khorde Avesta, the Yašts were produced throughout the Old Iranian period in the oral culture of priestly
Avestan_period
4th–6th-century Bactrian-speaking nomadic people of Central Asia
Oriental Studies, University of London. BSOAS, vol. 6, No. 4 (1932) "BAHMAN YAŠT" in Encyclopædia Iranica by W. Sundermann (Bailey, 1954, pp.12-16; 1932,
Xionites
Free and open-source system installer for Linux distributions
opt to leave the installer to its default look feel and options. Anaconda YaST Debian-Installer Ubiquity "Installer-Framework Calamares im Überblick" (in
Calamares_(software)
Sasanian period anthology of sacred literature of Zoroastrianism
and the Juddēvdād) as well as two miscellaneous nasks (Čihrdād and Bagān Yašt). The Čihrdād nask contains a mythical history of Iran, which makes it particularly
Sasanian_Avesta
Zoroastrian concept
York: Routledge & Kegan Paul: 750–751. Skjærvø, Prods Oktor (1987), "Ard Yašt", Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 2, New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul: 355–356
Ashi
Writing system used for the Pashto language
orthography. Pre-reform Afghan orthography also used ئـ. ^ Also ياسْت yāst in Southern Pashto. Pakistani orthography uses کْښې for the postposition
Pashto_alphabet
Sacred hymns of Zoroastrianism
2. 21: 13–38. doi:10.1163/1573384x-90000003. König, Götz (2024). "On the Yašt Gāhān (= Gāh Sārnā)". DABIR. 10: 175–202. doi:10.1163/29497833-20230002.
Gathas
Iranian goddess
original on 2007-12-14, retrieved 2007-04-02 Lommel, Herman (1927), Die Yašts des Awesta, Göttingen-Leipzig: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht/JC Hinrichs Lommel
Anahita
Earth-goddess in Proto-Indo-European mythology
contraction of *zām huδād yazad), divinity of the Munificent Earth in the Zamyād Yašt. Balto-Slavic: *źem- (from*dʰǵʰ-em-), Baltic: *žeme, Lithuanian: Žemyna (also
Dheghom
YAML—Yet Another Multicolumn Layout YARN—Yet Another Resource Negotiator YaST—Yet another Setup Tool ZCAV—Zone Constant Angular Velocity ZCS—Zero Code
List of computing and IT abbreviations
List_of_computing_and_IT_abbreviations
Linux distribution
github.com/geckolinux Available in Multilingual Package manager Zypper, YaST (Graphical) Supported platforms x86-64 Kernel type Monolithic (Linux) Userland
GeckoLinux
Operating system build service
openSUSE Build Service) openSUSE Project SUSE Linux SUSE Studio ImageWriter YaST ZYpp Hyper-V appliances are GO!, SUSE Studio, February 6, 2012, archived
SUSE_Studio
Type-1 hypervisor
guests. Examples include: The OpenNebula cloud management toolkit On openSUSE YaST and virt-man offer graphical VM management OpenStack natively supports Xen
Xen
Ritual implement used by Zoroastrian priests
Bombay: British India Press, pp. 277–286 Skjærvø, Prods Oktor (1989), "Barsom Yašt", Encyclopedia Iranica, vol. 3, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, p. 827 West
Barsom
Character from the Iranian nation history
oldest trace of the story of Iraj and his brothers is found in the Fravardin Yašt, where the fravaši of Manu-ščiθra (> Manučehr) son of Airiya (> Iraj) is
Iraj
Texts related to the Iranian religion
Vīsprad Vīdēvdād Vīštāsp Sast Khordeh Avesta Niyāyišn Gāh Āfrīnagān Sih-rozag Yašts (a group of 21 hymns, such as the Ohrmazd Yasht) Āfrīn ī Zardušt Aogəmadaecā
Zoroastrian_literature
Rapid installer for Linux distributions
images. Similar software exists for Red Hat (Kickstart), SuSE (AutoYaST, YaST and alice), Solaris (Jumpstart) and likely other operating systems. Free
Fully_Automatic_Installation
Deified river mentioned in the Vedas and ancient Indian epics
(PDF) on 29 February 2008. by Lommel (1927); Lommel, Herman (1927), Die Yašts des Awesta, Göttingen-Leipzig: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht/JC Hinrichs Parpola
Saraswati_River
826 Lommel, Herman (1927), Die Yašts des Awesta, Göttingen/Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs Skjærvø, Prods Oktor (1987), "Aštād Yašt", Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol
Arshtat
Free and open-source system installer for Linux distributions
(possibly with small changes) to install a very similar system again. Calamares YaST Debian-Installer Ubiquity "Release 45.9". 23 June 2026. Retrieved 24 June
Anaconda_(installer)
Web-based control panel for Unix-like systems
Free and open-source software portal Internet portal Virtualmin Usermin YaST "Webmin". Webmin. Retrieved 3 June 2026. "Release 2.641". 11 May 2026. Retrieved
Webmin
around the peak of Mount Hukairiia and, according to a text known as Rašn Yašt, the stars, sun, and moon revolve around the peak of Mount Haraitī. Furthermore
Zoroastrian_cosmology
Idiomatic qualifier used in the name of programs
Similarity Searcher, a pairwise nucleotide sequence alignment tool with dotplot YaST – Yet another Setup Tool, an operating system installation and configuration
Yet_another
Process of making a computer program ready for execution
Ubuntu Desktop Installer: current Ubuntu Desktop installer (starting 23.04) YaST for SUSE-based projects Another example is found in the Haiku operating system
Installation (computer programs)
Installation_(computer_programs)
Iron Age archaeological culture in the Volga Steppe
Sauromatians may have been the Saⁱrima- (𐬯𐬀𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬨𐬀) people mentioned in the Yašts as one of the five peoples following the Zoroastrian religion, along with
Sauromatian_culture
Zoroastrian religious ceremony
König 2024, "Not unlikely seems to me an assumption that the expression “Yašt (ī) Gāhān” once referred to a recitation not of a single Gāϑā, but of all
Yasht_i_Gahan
Zoroastrian demon (daeva)
Zoroastrianism, New York: Oxford University Press Skjærvø, Prods Oktor (1987), "Aštād Yašt", Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 2, New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul: 826
Bushyasta
YAST
YAST
Girl/Female
Hindu
Girl/Female
Tamil
Yastika | யாஸà¯à®¤à¯€à®•ா
Yastika | யாஸà¯à®¤à¯€à®•ா
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit
A String Pf Pearls
Girl/Female
Tamil
Slim
Boy/Male
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi
Slim
YAST
YAST
Male
Hebrew
(×¤Ö¼Ö´×™× Ö°×—Ö¸×¡) Hebrew form of Egyptian Panhsj ("the Nubian"), but translated from Hebrew pinechac, PIYNECHAC means "mouth of brass." In the bible, this is the name of several characters, including a son of Eleazar.Â
Girl/Female
Arabic, Latin
Wise Prayer
Girl/Female
Arabic, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Jain, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Muslim, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu
Wish; A Bird; Desire; Hope
Girl/Female
Greek
Prophetess; oracle.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Powerful
Girl/Female
Tamil
Iditri | இதிதà¯à®°à¯€
One who praises, Complimentary
Girl/Female
Hindu
Girl/Female
German
Temptress.
Boy/Male
Buddhist, Indian, Japanese
Clear / Transparent Meditation Practice
Female
Spanish
Feminine form of Spanish Felipe, FELIPA means "lover of horses."
YAST
YAST
YAST
YAST
YAST