Page 2 Names Like Amylee

Showing 21 to 40 out of total 132 names like Amylee

Ameilia
Amylah
This name is a variant form of Emilia and Amalia. It is of Latin and Germanic origin and comes from the following roots: (AEMILIUS) and (AMELIA). 1) Amalia derives from the Germanic (Goths) “ama-l / amals,” meaning “work, effort, strain, diligent, brave.” 2) Emilia derives from the Latin “Æmŭlus > Æmĭlĭus > Æmĭlĭa,” meaning “imitating, rivaling.”
Ameal
Amylia
The one who is industrious, hard working and fertile.
Amel
Hope, A pure name meaning hard work, hope and expectation.
Amela
Work or effort.
Ameila
The one who works hard, is industrious and fertile.
Amalio
This name derives from the Germanic (Goths) “*amal / ama-l,” meaning “work, vigor, courage, brave, bold, diligent, Amali dynasty.” The Amali (the tribe of the Amaler), also called Amals or Amalings, were the leading dynasty of the Goths, a Germanic people who confronted the Roman Empire in its declining years in the west. According to Gothic legend, the Amali was descended from an ancient hero whose deeds earned him the epithet of Amala or “mighty.”
Amily
Amaal
Hopes and expectations.
Amylea
Amealia
Ameela
Aamilah
Doer of good deeds, Righteous, Hopeful, One who always does what's right. A righteous woman.
Ammal
This name derives from the Arabic “āmāl,” meaning “hope, aspiration.”
Amaliah
Ameleah
Amelea
The one who is industrious, hard working and fertile.
Amalee
A person eager to work hard and achieve heights like a leader.
Amilie
This name derives from the Latin “Æmŭlus > Æmĭlĭus > Æmĭlĭa,” meaning “imitating, rivaling.” The gens Aemilia, originally written Aimilia, was one of the most ancient patrician houses in Rome. The family was said to have originated in the reign of Numa Pompilius, the second King of Rome, and its members held the highest offices of the state, from the early decades of the Republic to imperial times. Emily’s name has been used as a vernacular form of the Germanic “Amelia” up to the 19th-century. Used since the Middle Ages, it was popular in the 19th-century and is once again today. Émilie de Vialar (1797–1856) was a French nun who founded the missionary congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Apparition. She is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church. Émilie Tavernier Gamelin (1800–1851) was a French Canadian social worker and Roman Catholic Religious Sister.