Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
AlajõeEstonian Alajõe is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region water".
AlakiviEstonian Alakivi is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region stone".
AlamäeEstonian Alamäe is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region hill/mountain".
AlametsEstonian Alamets is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region forest".
AlaojaEstonian Alaoja is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region creek".
AlasEstonian Alas is an Estonian surname, derived from either "ala-" meaning "area" and "region"; or "alasti", meaning "bald" and "nude"; "alastus" means "bareness".
AlasaluEstonian Alasalu is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region grove".
AlasooEstonian Alasoo is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region swamp".
AlaväliEstonian Alaväli is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region field".
AlaveeEstonian Alavee is an Estonian surname meaning "area/region water".
ChénierFrench French surname which indicated one who lived in an oak wood or near a conspicuous oak tree, derived from Old French chesne "oak" (Late Latin caxinus). In some cases it may be from a Louisiana dialectical term referring to "an area of shrub oak growing in sandy soil" (i.e., "beach ridge, usually composed of sand-sized material resting on clay or mud... [more]
DeshapriyaSinhalese Derived from Sanskrit देश (desha) meaning "region, place, country" and प्रिय (priya) meaning "beloved, dear".
DissanayakeSinhalese From Sanskrit देश (desha) meaning "region, country" and नायक (nayaka) meaning "hero, leader".
GeiselhartGerman (Silesian, Rare), Lombardic (Rare), Old High German (Rare) Possibly after the Geisel, a river in Saxony-Anhalt, which likely received its name from either the Lombardic patronym Giso, meaning "noble, precious promise" or from the Old High German gewi, from the Gothic gavi, or gaujis, a which is a medieval term for a "region within a country", often a former or actual province combined with the suffix Hart, which means "stag", and comes from the Middle English hert and the Old English heort.... [more]
IngEnglish From the name of a former district in Essex, possibly derived from Old English ing "meadow, water meadow", or from ge "district, region" combined with the suffix -ing. Alternatively, it could derive from the given name Inge.
IsobeJapanese From the Japanese 磯 (iso) meaning "beach" and 部 (be) meaning "region, division, part".
JeffreyEnglish From a Norman personal name that appears in Middle English as Geffrey and in Old French as Je(u)froi. Some authorities regard this as no more than a palatalized form of Godfrey, but early forms such as Galfridus and Gaufridus point to a first element from Germanic gala "to sing" or gawi "region, territory"... [more]
MiyabeJapanese From the Japanese 宮 (miya) "{Shinto} shrine" and 部 (be) "region," "division," "part."
SussexEnglish Derived from an English county name meaning "region of the Saxons from the south" in Old English.
Van OortDutch Means "from the edge (of town)", derived from Middle Dutch ort "edge, corner, outermost point of a region". Sometimes altered to or from the surname Van Noort.
YabeJapanese From the Japanese 矢 (ya) "arrow" and 部 (be) "region," "division," "part."