mirime-veon's Personal Name List

Adelais
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Germanic (Latinized) [1]
Shortened form of Adalheidis.
Aenor
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Germanic (Latinized)
Probably a Latinized form of a Germanic name of unknown meaning. This was the name of the mother of Eleanor of Aquitaine.
Alaric
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Gothic (Anglicized)
Other Scripts: πŒ°πŒ»πŒ°π‚πŒ΄πŒΉπŒΊπƒ(Gothic)
Pronounced: AL-Ι™-rik(English)
From the Gothic name *Alareiks meaning "ruler of all", derived from the element alls "all" combined with reiks "ruler, king". This was the name of a king of the Visigoths who sacked Rome in the 5th century.
Aldith
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Medieval English
Middle English form of Ealdgyð.
Alfwin
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Germanic [1]
Variant of Alboin.
Hamo
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Medieval English
Norman form of Haimo. The Normans brought this name to Britain.
Hamon
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Medieval English
Variant of Hamo.
Ishild
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Germanic (Hypothetical)
Germanic name, a hypothetical early form of Iseult.
Larkin
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Medieval English
Pronounced: LAHR-kin(English)
Medieval diminutive of Laurence 1.
Malle
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Estonian, Medieval English
Estonian diminutive of Maria or Maarja, now used independently. This was also a medieval English diminutive of Mary.
Melisende
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Medieval French
Old French form of Millicent.
Molle
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Medieval English
Medieval diminutive of Mary.
Rothaid
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Germanic [1]
Variant of Hrodohaidis.
Sunngifu
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Anglo-Saxon [1]
Old English form of Sunniva.
Synnöve
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Swedish
Swedish form of Sunniva.
Wolfram
Gender: Masculine
Usage: German
Pronounced: VAWL-fram
Derived from the Old German element wolf meaning "wolf" combined with hram meaning "raven". Saint Wolfram (or Wulfram) was a 7th-century archbishop of Sens. This name was also borne by the 13th-century German poet Wolfram von Eschenbach, the author of Parzival.
Wymond
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Medieval English
Middle English form of the Old English name Wigmund, composed of the elements wig "battle" and mund "protection".
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