Showing 21 to 40 out of total 90 names like Edeen
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- Edon
- Loved and independent being.
- Etna
- the name of a 5th century Irish saint.
- Eaden
- Etain
- This name derives from the Irish “ét > étaín,” meaning “jealousy.” Éadaoin is a figure of Irish mythology, best known as the heroine of Tochmarc Étaíne (English: The Wooing of Étaín), one of the oldest and wealthiest stories of the Mythological Cycle. She is sometimes known by the epithet Echraide, “horse rider,” suggesting links with horse deities and figures such as the Welsh Rhiannon and the Gaulish Epona.
- Etana
- Determination.
- Ettienne
- Aeddan
- English version of the Irish Aod?n, meaning "fire".
- Etien
- Edion
- Edain
- This name derives from the Irish “ét > étaín,” meaning “jealousy.” Éadaoin is a figure of Irish mythology, best known as the heroine of Tochmarc Étaíne (English: The Wooing of Étaín), one of the oldest and wealthiest stories of the Mythological Cycle. She is sometimes known by the epithet Echraide, “horse rider,” suggesting links with horse deities and figures such as the Welsh Rhiannon and the Gaulish Epona.
- Eidann
- Edden
- Delight, joy, One who has great ambition and strength.
- Edana
- Zealous, fiery.
- Eadan
- Eidane
- Edine
- One who came from Edinburgh.
- Aedin
- This name derives from the Irish “ét > étaín,” meaning “jealousy.” Éadaoin is a figure of Irish mythology, best known as the heroine of Tochmarc Étaíne (English: The Wooing of Étaín), one of the oldest and wealthiest stories of the Mythological Cycle. She is sometimes known by the epithet Echraide, “horse rider,” suggesting links with horse deities and figures such as the Welsh Rhiannon and the Gaulish Epona.
- Eiddon
- Etiene
- This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Stéfanos / Stéphanos (Στέφανος),” meaning “crown, garland, wreath, honor, reward, any prize or honor,” which in turn derives from “stéphō (στέφω),” meaning “to put round, to surround.” In ancient Greece, a crown was given to a contest winner (hence the crown, the symbol of rulers). The use of the noun was first recorded in Homer’s Iliad. The use of the noun was first recorded in Homer’s Iliad. The name is significant to Christians: according to the Book of Acts in the New Testament, Saint Stephen was a deacon who was stoned to death and is regarded as the first Christian martyr. In the United Kingdom, the name Stephen peaked in the 1950s and 1960s as one of the top ten male names (third in 1954), but dropped to 20th in 1984 and dropped out of the top 100 in 2002.
- Eideen