Showing 21 to 40 out of total 51 names like Whayne
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- Whyn
- Wayna
- The name means "young" in Quechua, the Native American language of South America.
- Whin
- Ywen
- Winney
- Waine
- Wani
- Wuon
- Wonn
- Weno
- Winn
- Winston is a name deriving from the old English words wynn, meaning "joy" and stonn, meaning "stone".
- Wenoa
- Winah
- Weonah
- Wenny
- The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) from the Proto-Germanic “*wandrōną > wendel,” meaning “to wander, roam, hike, migrate.” 2) from the Proto-Germanic “*winidaz,” meaning “Wend, Slav.” A term used for a member of a Slavic people from the borders of Germany and Poland; a Sorb; a Kashub. A term used for Slavic peoples living anywhere in the vicinity of German-speaking areas. 3) From the Ancient Germanic “wand,” meaning “stem, trunk, stalk.” The Vandals, a large East Germanic tribe or group of tribes, first appear in history inhabiting present-day southern Poland. Still, some later moved in large numbers, including most notably the group which successively established kingdoms in Spain and then North Africa in the 5th-century.
- Wennie
- The origin of this name is still today quite uncertain. The theories include: 1) from the Proto-Germanic “*wandrōną > wendel,” meaning “to wander, roam, hike, migrate.” 2) from the Proto-Germanic “*winidaz,” meaning “Wend, Slav.” A term used for a member of a Slavic people from the borders of Germany and Poland; a Sorb; a Kashub. A term used for Slavic peoples living anywhere in the vicinity of German-speaking areas. 3) From the Ancient Germanic “wand,” meaning “stem, trunk, stalk.” The Vandals, a large East Germanic tribe or group of tribes, first appear in history inhabiting present-day southern Poland. Still, some later moved in large numbers, including most notably the group which successively established kingdoms in Spain and then North Africa in the 5th-century.
- Waynie
- Whinney
- Whinnie
- Wini