Page 2 Names Like Kyriake

Showing 21 to 40 out of total 104 names like Kyriake

Kyrique
Kerky
Grieg
Cregg
Garek
A person who leads the nation with a spear., A person who leads the nation with a spear.
Creig
This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) surname and place name “Creighton,” composed of two elements: From the Old Irish “crích / críoch” (end, boundary, limit, region, territory) plus the Old English “tūn” (a farm, a hamlet, town). In turn, the name means “border town.” Mount Creighton is a mountain about 3 nautical miles (6 km) east-northeast of Mount Gavaghan in the Porthos Range of the Prince Charles Mountains.
Creag
Craeg
From the Scottish surname which is derived from the Scottish Gaelic craeg, meaning "rock".
Craigg
From the Scottish surname which is derived from the Scottish Gaelic craeg, meaning "rock".
Karac
A spiritual, religious and respectable being; fortunate, A spiritual, religious and respectable being, fortunate.
Kyrk
Dweller by the Church; Church; The Church of Scottish; A variant spelling is Kirk, Dweller by the Church, Church, The Church of Scottish, A variant spelling is Kirk.
Crayg
From the Scottish surname which is derived from the Scottish Gaelic craeg, meaning "rock".
Kerrick
Kerriann means Dusky.
Gregah
Garryk
Person who is controlling with spear., Person who is controlling with spear.
Carrig
Carraig
It is a male given name transferred from a Scottish locational surname, from any of the various places thus called, including Craig in North East Forfarshire, and Craig in South Ayrshire. The name derives from the Old Gaelic “creag,” meaning “rock,” a word that has been borrowed in Middle English as “crag.” In some instances, the name may be topographical, from residence by steep or precipitous rock.
Carrik
Gorka
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.
Kirac