Page 2 Names Like Briohny

Showing 21 to 40 out of total 260 names like Briohny

Buren
Burnie
Bernie
French female form of Bernard which is from the old German ber, meaning "bear" and hard, meaning "brave" or "strong".
Brown
Brown; Colour Name; Russet-complected, Brown, Colour Name, Russet-complected.
Barnie
From the Land That was Burned; Diminutive of Bernard; Brave; Bear; Courageous; Son of Comfort, From the Land That was Burned, Diminutive of Bernard, Brave, Bear, Courageous, Son of Comfort.
Barron
Warrior; The Title of Nobility Used as a First Name; From the Land That was Burned, Warrior, The Title of Nobility Used as a First Name, From the Land That was Burned.
Baron
The name means “noble man or noble warrior”. The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) From the English (Anglo-Saxon) “beorn,” which in turn derives from the Germanic “bernuz,” which means “bear,” used in early Germanic law in the sense of homo, especially “man, servant, follower, warrior.” In the English language, the word is never used for “bear,” while the Old Norse word is never used for “warrior.” 2) Some scholars consider the name of a variant “bairn,” meaning “child, offspring, boy, servant,” or from the Germanic “*beron-,” meaning “carrier, servant.”
Brain
The important part of the body, located in the skull, The important part of the body, located in the skull.
Bryn
From the Welsh bryn, meaning "hill" or "high".
Breeana
Irish: high, noble.
Breeanna
One who is strong and honourable.
Berania
Brynna
A woman from the hill.
Bruno
From the German brun, meaning "brown".
Bayron
Bruna
Female Latin form of Bruno, meaning "brown".
Berna
Bear, Courageous, Brave Like a Bear, Strong Bear.
Bryna
A strenght and a force in the person.
Brienne
A strong woman og noble birth.
Breeann
This name is of Irish and Breton origin, as well as a surname of Occitan origin. The name may derive from an Old Celtic word, meaning “noble, strong, and virtuous” or borrowing from the Proto-Brythonic “*brigonos,” meaning “high, noble.” The name is quite popular in Ireland, on account of Brian Boru (~941–1014), (Old Irish: Brian Bóruma Mac Cennétig, Modern Irish: Brian Bóroimhe), an Irish King who ended the domination of the high kingship of Ireland by the Uí Néill. The name was also quite popular in East Anglia during the Middle Ages because Bretons introduced the name to England following the Norman Conquest. The Bretons also settled in Ireland with the Normans in the 12th-century, and the name was mixed with the “Irish” version. In Gothic mythology, and especially in Scotland, Brian was a pretentious man who helped Cailleach save Deò-ghrèine. He was the son of Tuireann and the brother of Iuchar and Iucharba.