Page 7 Names Like Stene

Showing 121 to 140 out of total 193 names like Stene

Zydan
Seaton
One who is from the farm by the sea, One who is from the farm by the sea.
Zidon
Zy'-don, hunting, fishing, venison. Gen. xlix. 13. See Sidon.
Cideon
Seidon
Xiadane
Zzayden
Sateen
This name derives from the 14th-century Old French word “satin (satẽ),” influenced in French by the Latin “seta” (silk), which in turn derives from the medieval Arabic “zaytūn > Zaitūn (the Chinese port city of Quanzhou from which came the fabric).” Zaitūn, in the Arabic language, means “olive tree, a type of hardwood prayer beads.” The modern English meaning is “smooth, soft, delicate.”
Cidnee
Cydne
Stanna
Sadieann
Zdena
This name is of Slavic origin, composed of two Proto-Slavic elements: “zídati (зи́дати)” (to build, to create, construct) plus “sláva (сла́ва)” (glory, fame, renown, honor, repute, reputation). In turn, the name means “created with glory, the glory of creation.” Zdeslav was a duke (Croatian: knez) of the Duchy of Croatia in 878–879. Zdeslav was the son of Trpimir I. After his father’s death in 864, a powerful Croatian nobleman launched an uprising from Knin-Domagoj, and Zdeslav was exiled with his brothers, Petar, and Muncimir to Constantinople.
Satina
This name derives from the 14th-century Old French word “satin (satẽ),” influenced in French by the Latin “seta” (silk), which in turn derives from the medieval Arabic “zaytūn > Zaitūn (the Chinese port city of Quanzhou from which came the fabric).” Zaitūn, in the Arabic language, means “olive tree, a type of hardwood prayer beads.” The modern English meaning is “smooth, soft, delicate.”
Sidne
French: Saint-Denis. English: wide island.
Sodaney
Sydony
Sodany
Sydonni
Stenia
This name derives from the Ancient Greek “Stéfanos / Stéphanos (Στέφανος),” meaning “crown, garland, wreath, honor, reward, any prize or honor,” which in turn derives from “stéphō (στέφω),” meaning “to put round, to surround.” In ancient Greece, a crown was given to a contest winner (hence the crown, the symbol of rulers). The use of the noun was first recorded in Homer’s Iliad. The use of the noun was first recorded in Homer’s Iliad. The name is significant to Christians: according to the Book of Acts in the New Testament, Saint Stephen was a deacon who was stoned to death and is regarded as the first Christian martyr. In the United Kingdom, the name Stephen peaked in the 1950s and 1960s as one of the top ten male names (third in 1954), but dropped to 20th in 1984 and dropped out of the top 100 in 2002.