CaprioItalian from Latin caprae ‘goats’ or possibly from Greek kapros "(wild) boar" and so a metonymic occupational name for a goatherd or swineherd or a nickname for someone thought to resemble a goat or boar.
ErwinEnglish, German, Irish, Scottish From the given name Erwin. From the Middle English personal name EverwinErwin perhaps from Old English Eoforwine (eofor "boar" and wine "friend") but mostly from an Old French form of the cognate ancient Germanic name Everwin or from a different ancient Germanic name Herewin with loss of initial H- (first element hariheri "army")... [more]
EveringhamEnglish Means "homestead of the followers of Eofor". From Old English eofor "boar" inga, meaning "the people of, followers of" and ham meaning "home, estate, settlement".
InōeJapanese 猪上 comes from the kanji (猪 = boar) and (上 = above; up) and could be translated as "The boar from above"
InoguchiJapanese Ino means "boar" and guchi means "mouth, opening".
InokiJapanese Ino means "boar" and ki means "tree, wood".
InokoJapanese Ino means "boar" and ko means "child, first of the Chinese zodiac: the rat".
InokumaJapanese From 猪 (ino) meaning "boar" and 熊 (kuma) meaning "bear".
InomataJapanese From Japanese 猪 (ino) meaning "wild boar" and 俣 (mata) or 股 (mata) both meaning "fork, crotch".