Showing 1 to 20 out of total 314 names like Diaro
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- Terry
- Meaning taken from the Roman family name of Terentius, meaning "smooth".
- Terri
- From the Greek meaning "reaper of the harvest".
- Teri
- A short form of Theresa. Possibly also the feminine form of theMale name Terry, which is from the Greek meaning "reaper".
- Dora
- English name from the Greek element deron, meaning "gift". Also a short form of Dorothy, Theodora and Isadora and Doreen.
- Tara
- From the Irish place name Teamhair, which is from the Irish Gaelic meaning "rocky hill".
- Terra
- From the earth. An earth goddess in mythology, From the earth. An earth goddess in mythology.
- Tori
- A nickname of Victoria meaning "the victorious one".
- Tyra
- An old Danish name, and the feminine form of Tyr, the Norse god of war.
- Troy
- Name taken from the ancient city of Troy, besieged by the Greeks in ancient mythology.
- Drew
- A short form of Andrew, which is an English and Scottish form of the the Greek Andreas meaning "manly". Was traditionally aMale name, but has recently been used for females.
- Trey
- Traditionally given to the third born. The word derives from Old French treie, meaning "three".
- Dera
- Dura
- This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Geṓrgios (Γεώργῐος),” from the element: “geōrgós (γεωργός)” (tilling the ground, fertilizing), which in turn derives from “gê (γῆ)” (land, earth, country, soil) plus “érgon (ἔργον)” (deed, doing, action, labor, work, task). In turn, the name means “land-worker, farmer.” In the West, the name is known from the 11th-century as a result of the Crusades. The name’s use was extended due to the popularity of St. George and the Golden Legend, widespread in the European courts of the thirteenth century. In Germany, the name has been popular since the Middle Ages, declining in later use. In Britain, despite there being St. George, the patron of England since the fourteenth century, the name did not become popular until the eighteenth century following George I of England’s accession. In the United States, statistics from the mid-19th-century placed him among the five most popular baby names.
- Terrie
- From the Greek meaning "reaper of the harvest".
- Dara
- Either from the Hebrew meaning "pearl of wisdom", also a masculine Irish name from the Gaelic meaning "oak tree".
- Tera
- Crag, hill
- Torrie
- A form of tori, tory.
- Tierra
- The jewelled crown.
- Tiera
- the earth or the land.
- Taira