Names Like Ece

Showing 1 to 20 out of total 63 names like Ece

Essie
a Latin word meaning star.
Esaw
This name derives from the Hebrew “‘Êśâv > ‘Hēsāû,” meaning “hairy, rough, rude.” Esau, in the Jewish Bible, is the older son of Isaac. He is mentioned in the Book of Genesis and by the prophets, Obadiah and Malachi. The New Testament of the Christian Bible alludes to him in Saint Paul’s Letter to the Romans and the Letter to the Hebrews.
Eiza
Arabic: Lord is salvation, comfort. Hebrew: Pledged to God. German: Strong-willed.
Esai
a Spanish word meaning god is my salvation., a Spanish word meaning god is my salvation.
Esau
a person who finishes., a person who finishes.
Ezio
One who is like an eagle, One who is like an eagle.
Essa
A short form of Esther, a Hebrew name which could come from the Persian stara, meaning "star" or the Hebrew name Hadassah, which is from astra, meaning "myrtle".
Eesa
Esa
From the Hebrew meaning "God is salvation".
Eziah
Eisa
Yahweh is my salvation, Name of a Prophet.
Essiah
Ese
a Frisian word meaning god., a Frisian word meaning god.
Esi
One who is born on Sunday.
Ezzah
A person who gives the honor, Respect, A Person who Gives the Honour, Respect, Considerable, Admirable.
Ezo
This name derives from the Germanic “Azzo,” the medieval shortened form of various first names starting with “E” or “He,” based on the element “AZ.” Multiple hypotheses are suggested, including: 1) From the Germanic element “*aþalaz,” meaning “noble, nobleman, aristocratic, eminent, glorious, excellent.” 2) From the Germanic (Gothic) “*átta,” meaning “father.” 3) From the Ancient Germanic “*ansuz,” meaning “heathen god.” Ansuz is the conventional name given to the a-rune of the Elder Futhark. The name is based on Common Germanic “*ansuz,” a god, one of the principal deities in Germanic paganism. Ezzo (~955–1034), sometimes called Ehrenfried, Count Palatine of Lotharingia of the Ezzonen dynasty, brother-in-law of Emperor Otto III, father of Queen Richeza of Poland and many other illustrious children, is undoubtedly one of the most important figures of the Rhenish History of his time. Azzo da Correggio (1303–1362) was an Italian leader and soldier of fortune who lived in the fourteenth century.
Eos
the meaning is dawn.
Essi
This name derives from the Biblical Greek “Elisábet (Ελισάβετ),” a form of the Hebrew name Elisheva (‘ĕlı̂ysheba’), which in turn is composed of two elements: the “ʾēl” (God, the God of Israel) plus “sh’ vu’a (sh-b-ʿ)” (oath). In turn, the name means “my God is an oath, my God is abundance.” shavu’ót (plural form) is a Jewish holiday that occurs in the spring, a harvest festival, also commemorating the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. This name and its variants are spread all over the world. The name appears in the Old Testament as the name of Aaron’s wife “Elisheva,” and in the New Testament as the name of the wife of the priest Zechariah and mother of John the Baptist. Linked to this root we can find: Elizabeth I, queen regnant of England and Ireland, Elizabeth of Hungary (Erzsébet), princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese), queen consort of Portugal, a tertiary of the Franciscan Order and is venerated as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church.
Essia
Essy
This name derives from the Old Persian and Akkadian (Babylonian) “(stāra > setāra) (Ištar) (ḥadaṣah),” most likely from the name of the Babylonian goddess of love. The given name was adopted as an English name in the 17th-century. The biblical Queen Esther is associated with the Hebrew word “ḥadaṣah” (myrtle). It has remained a popular name in some Jewish communities. According to the bible, she was a Jewish queen of the Persian king Ahasuerus. It is the Old Testament’s name to the old Semitic mother-goddess, called in Phenicia, Ashtarte; in Babylonia, Ishtar; and in Arabia, Athtar.