Page 8 Names Like Loueis

Showing 141 to 160 out of total 188 names like Loueis

Laicy
Lacey and its variants were first a baronial surname with Norman-French origins from a place name. The town of Lassy is a commune in the Calvados department in the Basse-Normandie region in northwestern France, named after a Gaulish personal name “Lascius.” Lascius appears to have Latin roots and maybe a derivative of “lascivus” which means ‘playful, cheerful, rampant, arrogant, insolent. The name was fairly restricted to English nobility and was also a powerful family name in medieval Ireland. The name first appeared in the Domesday Book, recorded as “de Laci” in 1086. Gautier de Lacy was a Norman nobleman who came to England after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. He received lands in Herefordshire and Shropshire and served King William I of England by leading military forces during 1075.
Leis
Hebrew: My God is an oath.
Leiza
A modern Anglo-American alternative spelling of Lisa, short for Elisabeth, the Greek form of the Hebrew Elisheba, meaning "God is my oath".
Leezia
Lessia
Llyssa
Loissa
Lasa
Saffron; Turmeric, Saffron, Turmeric.
Leissa
Liessa
Lyzza
Lici
Lyz
Lizz
A woman hallowed by the Oath made to God.
Lizah
A modern Anglo-American alternative spelling of Lisa, short for Elisabeth, the Greek form of the Hebrew Elisheba, meaning "God is my oath".
Lazia
Luizah
Lusi
This name derives from the Latin “lūx > lūcis > lucere (lūcĕo) > lūcĭus,” meaning “light, shine, clear, bright, shining, full of light,” which in turn derives from the Proto-Italic “*louks,” meaning “white, light, bright,” compared to the Ancient Greek “leukós (λευκός).” Throughout Roman history, Lucius was the most common praenomen, used slightly more than Gaius, and somewhat more than Marcus. The name survived the collapse of the Western Empire in the 5th-century and had continued into modern times. Saint Lucian of Antioch, known as Lucian, the martyr, was a Christian presbyter, theologian, and martyr. He was noted for both his scholarship and ascetic piety. 1) Lucius Licinius Lucullus (118–57/56 BC) was an optimate politician of the late Roman Republic, closely connected with Lucius Cornelius Sulla. 2) Lucia Visconti (1372–1424) was the daughter of Bernabò Visconti, Lord of Milan, and Beatrice Regina della Scala. She was one of seventeen legitimate children. 3) Lúcia de Jesus dos Santos (1907–2005), also known as Lúcia of Fátima and by her religious name Sister Maria Lúcia of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart, was a Portuguese Catholic Carmelite nun and one of the three children to witness the 1917 Marian apparitions in Fátima.
Lyzah
A modern Anglo-American alternative spelling of Lisa, short for Elisabeth, the Greek form of the Hebrew Elisheba, meaning "God is my oath".
Laizza