Page 5 Names Like Lady

Showing 81 to 100 out of total 139 names like Lady

Lado
Italian: the lady.
Lodo
Lat
Slavic: Fairy queen.
Liad
Lido
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Lūdós (Λῡδός) Lydía (Λυδία),” meaning “the Lydian woman, the woman of purple, an inhabitant of Lydia, a Lydian.” Lydia of Thyatira is a woman mentioned in the New Testament who is regarded as the first documented convert to Christianity in Europe. Several Christian denominations have designated her a saint. Lydia was most likely a Greek even though she lived in a Roman settlement. She was a well-to-do agent of a purple-dye firm in Thyatira, a city southeast of Pergamum and approximately 40 miles inland, across the Aegean Sea from Athens. Lydós was the third king of Maeonia in succession to his father, Atys. He was the third and last king of the Atyad dynasty. According to Herodotus, Maeonia became known as Lydia after Lydus’s reign. Lydiane is also a town in east-central Senegal in the Kaolack region.
Lodu
Led
English: spear tribe.
Latta
Ladu
King, King, Ruler, Emperor, Leader, Chief.
Lataa
Luut
This name derives from the Old High German “Chlodowich and Chlodovech,” composed of two elements: “*hlūdaz,” meaning (to hear, loud, sound, noise / famous) plus “wīg,” meaning (fight, battle, fighter, able to fight). The name means “glorious in the battle, famous warrior.” Directly from the root of the name derives, for example, “Ludwig” and from “Chlodovech,” for example, derive the masculine form “Clovis and Clodoveo.” Clovis I, “Latinized form Chlodovech,” was king of the Franks and ruler of much of Gaul from 481 to 511, a crucial period during the transformation of the Roman Empire into Europe. His dynasty, the Merovingians, survived more than 200 years, until the rise of the Carolingians in the 8th-century. While he was not the first Frankish king, he was the kingdom’s political and religious founder.
Luda
Love of the people.
Lot
Covered up, veiled person., Covered up, veiled person.
Lidy
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Lūdós (Λῡδός) Lydía (Λυδία),” meaning “the Lydian woman, the woman of purple, an inhabitant of Lydia, a Lydian.” Lydia of Thyatira is a woman mentioned in the New Testament who is regarded as the first documented convert to Christianity in Europe. Several Christian denominations have designated her a saint. Lydia was most likely a Greek even though she lived in a Roman settlement. She was a well-to-do agent of a purple-dye firm in Thyatira, a city southeast of Pergamum and approximately 40 miles inland, across the Aegean Sea from Athens. Lydós was the third king of Maeonia in succession to his father, Atys. He was the third and last king of the Atyad dynasty. According to Herodotus, Maeonia became known as Lydia after Lydus’s reign. Lydiane is also a town in east-central Senegal in the Kaolack region.
Lloyda
Leeta
Leaetta
Laudia
Leotti
Leeda
African word meaning to bring.