Showing 1 to 20 out of total 34 names like Hauke
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- Hugo
- Latin form of Hugh, which comes from the German hug, meaning "heart" or "spirit".
- Huck
- English - Resembling the fruit; A variant of Huckleberry, English - Resembling the fruit, A variant of Huckleberry.
- Hawk
- Old Norse - Falcon; Bird of Prey, Old Norse - Falcon, Bird of Prey.
- Haig
- From the enclosed field, From the enclosed field.
- Haik
- This name derives from the Armenian “Haykuhi (Հայկուհի),” meaning “daughter of Hayk,” from “hay (հայ),” meaning “Armenian, salvation, saved, preserved.” Haik Nahapet (Հայկ Նահապետ, Hayk the Tribal Chief) is the legendary patriarch and founder of the Armenian nation. His story is told in the History of Armenia attributed to the Armenian historian Moses of Chorene (410 to 490).
- Hayk
- This name derives from the Armenian “Haykuhi (Հայկուհի),” meaning “daughter of Hayk,” from “hay (հայ),” meaning “Armenian, salvation, saved, preserved.” Haik Nahapet (Հայկ Նահապետ, Hayk the Tribal Chief) is the legendary patriarch and founder of the Armenian nation. His story is told in the History of Armenia attributed to the Armenian historian Moses of Chorene (410 to 490).
- Hoke
- Hiiaka
- It is the name of a goddess (Hawaiian mythology). She is one of the twelve sisters of the volcano goddess Pele, especially the youngest and favorite one.
- Haukea
- white snow
- Haiqa
- True, Truly, Obedient of God, Obedient the God, Truely Worshiper.
- Haika
- Haiqah
- Hok
- This name derives from the Old Norse “haukr,” meaning “hawk.”
- Hawke
- A falcon bird of prey.
- Haaki
- Heike
- Feminine form of Heinrich, originally from the Germanic name Heimerich, from heim, meaning "home" and ric, meaning "power, ruler".
- Haikah
- Hakki
- This name derives from the Old Norwegian “Håkon” of a West Germanic origin. It is a combination of mixed elements and difficult to interpret. The first element could be from the Old Norse “hár / hór”, which in turn derives from the Ancient Germanic “*hauhaz”, meaning “high”, while the second element seems to be “*kunją”, meaning “kin, family, clan, dynasty”, or from the Old Norse “kona”, meaning “a woman, a wife”. The most likely meaning could be “great family or dynasty or one who is part of a great dynasty.” An old English name form “Hacon” has survived in English placenames like Haconby, which means Hacon’s Village, originating through Norse settlers in England.
- Heckie
- This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Héktōr (Ἕκτωρ) Héktoros (Ἕκτορος),” meaning “to hold, to possess.” It is probably derived from the Ancient Greek “ékhō (ἔχω) ékhein (ἔχειν),” meaning “have, possess, contain, own, hold back, stay, check.” In Greek mythology and Roman mythology, Hector was a legendary Trojan champion, prince and the greatest fighter for Troy in the Trojan War. The Greek Achilles later killed Hector. In Scotland, the name Hector is often used as an anglicized form of the Scottish Gaelic Eachann. The name of Sir Ector, the foster father of King Arthur, is also a variant of the same.
- Hawkai