Showing 1 to 20 out of total 40 names like Woodiee
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- Wade
- From the Old English surname wade, "a ford" or wadan, "to go".
- Woodie
- Woodrow has initially been an English topographical surname. This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) pre-7th-Century “wudu” (wood, forest, grove, tree, timber), and “raw” (row, line), or a locational name from any of the various places named with the above elements. Other sources suggest the family name is descriptively originating as Woodroe or the border hedge as the clan consisted primarily of border guards at the English, Welsh, and Scottish borders. The name was made popular in part by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, whose mother’s maiden name was Woodrow.
- Wood
- Woodrow has initially been an English topographical surname. This name derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) pre-7th-Century “wudu” (wood, forest, grove, tree, timber), and “raw” (row, line), or a locational name from any of the various places named with the above elements. Other sources suggest the family name is descriptively originating as Woodroe or the border hedge as the clan consisted primarily of border guards at the English, Welsh, and Scottish borders. The name was made popular in part by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, whose mother’s maiden name was Woodrow.
- Woody
- Pet form of Woodrow, originally a local name given to someone who lived in a row of houses by a wood.
- Wayde
- From the Old English surname wade, "a ford" or wadan, "to go".
- Whit
- Old English: White meadow.
- Wadeeah
- Watie
- Witt
- Whitt
- Waad
- Wadi
- Calm, Peaceful.
- Wadah
- Wadea
- Wita
- This name derives from the Ancient Germanic root “*widu / Vitu,” which means “forest as a borderline, forest, wood, tree.” Some forms of the name derived from the Latin “vīta,” which means “life.” Guido In the past was the diminutive form of other names, such as Guidobaldo and Guidalberto, which are Germanic, but already in the past, “Wido” was confused with Latin Vitus (today Vito), which in fact in many languages all names are entirely equivalent. Saint Guy of Anderlecht was a Christian saint. He was known as the Poor Man of Anderlecht. 2) Saint Vitus, according to Christian legend, was a Christian saint from Sicily. He died as a martyr during the persecution of Christians by co-ruling Roman Emperors Diocletian and Maximian in 303. Vitus is counted as one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers of the Roman Catholic Church. 3) Guido is a slang term for a working-class urban Italian American. The “Guido” stereotype is multi-faceted. Initially, it was used as a demeaning term for Italian Americans in general.
- Wadie
- From the Old English surname wade, "a ford" or wadan, "to go".
- Woodi
- Wit
- This name derives from the Ancient Germanic root “*widu / Vitu,” which means “forest as a borderline, forest, wood, tree.” Some forms of the name derived from the Latin “vīta,” which means “life.” Guido In the past was the diminutive form of other names, such as Guidobaldo and Guidalberto, which are Germanic, but already in the past, “Wido” was confused with Latin Vitus (today Vito), which in fact in many languages all names are entirely equivalent. Saint Guy of Anderlecht was a Christian saint. He was known as the Poor Man of Anderlecht. 2) Saint Vitus, according to Christian legend, was a Christian saint from Sicily. He died as a martyr during the persecution of Christians by co-ruling Roman Emperors Diocletian and Maximian in 303. Vitus is counted as one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers of the Roman Catholic Church. 3) Guido is a slang term for a working-class urban Italian American. The “Guido” stereotype is multi-faceted. Initially, it was used as a demeaning term for Italian Americans in general.
- Wayd
- Waddie