Showing 1 to 20 out of total 108 names like Levvy
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- Leigh
- From the Hebrew Le'ah, probably derived from the identical word le'ah, meaning "weary".
- Leif
- From the Old Norse leifr, meaning "heir".
- Levi
- From the Hebrew meaning "joined to" or "attached".
- Lovie
- The one who is deeply loved.
- Love
- A Swedish form of the French Louis, from the Germanic Ludwig, orig. Hludwig, a composite of the words hlud, "fame", and wig, "warrior".
- Leigha
- Weary and a tiresome.
- Livia
- Livia is the feminine form of Livius, from a Roman family name, possibly from livio "to envy", or lividus, "blue, envious",.
- Livie
- Color Blue
- Levy
- From the Hebrew meaning "joined to" or "attached".
- Levie
- This name derives from the Hebrew “lêvı̂y > Lēwî,” meaning “joined to.” According to the Book of Genesis, Levi or Levy was the third son of Jacob and Leah and the founder of the Israelite Tribe of Levi (the Levites). The Torah suggests that Levi’s name refers to Leah’s hope for Jacob to join with her, implying a derivation from yillaweh, meaning he will join. Still, Biblical scholars have proposed entirely different origins of the name.
- Liv
- From the Icelandic hlif, meaning "protection". Today the name is associated with the modern Scandinavian use of the word liv, meaning "life".
- Lluvia
- Spanish word that means Rain.
- Laveah
- Loveah
- Livi
- From the Latin olivirius, "olive tree".
- Lyvia
- Lev
- Russian name for Lion, Russian name for Lion.
- Leevi
- One who is attached, One who is attached.
- Liev
- A person with a heart of a Lion, a very brave man, A person with a heart of a Lion, a very brave man.
- Lavi
- This name derives from the Old Norse “anu *laiƀaR > læfan > ÓlæifR > Ólafr,” meaning “to shine, gleam, elf, supernatural being, a descendant of ancestors, relic of the ancestors, legacy of ancestors.” Olaf II Haraldsson, later known as St. Olaf, was King of Norway from 1015 to 1028. He was posthumously given the title Rex Perpetuus Norvegiae (English “Norway’s Eternal King”) and canonized in Nidaros (Trondheim) by Bishop Grimkell, one year after his death in the Battle of Stiklestad on 29 July 1030. Olaf is a cognate of the name “Oliver” and its variants.