Hebrew biblical name of one of the judges who ruled over
Israel, meaning
servant, worshiper
An old Germ
An nickname and surname, now sometimes used as a first name. It derives from the Germ
An word alt
old, and diener meaning
servant It is related to the name
Aldman, meaning
old man
Basque name meaning
carpenter
English occupational surname transferred to unisex forename use, meaning
bailiff
Egyptian name meaning
teacher
English and Scottish occupational surname transferred to forename use,
derived from Old English bćcestre, the feminine form of bćcere,
meaning
female baker
English occupational surname transferred to forename use. Originally, it was used to denote both a
book-binder and a
scribe
Nickname for Italian
Fabrizio, meaning
craftsman
Originally a nickname for the occupational surname Butcher. Later it was
used to address a stranger in a sort of derogatory manner. For example,
Listen here, Butch..
Biblical name of a
descendant of
Adam,
meaning
possession; smith
English occupational surname transferred to forename
use, meaning "carter," someone who uses a
cart.
English occupational surname transferred to forename
use, meaning "carver" of wood or stone.
Cellar-worker Old Gaelic nickname
transferred to forename use, from Latin cella
meaning
cellar
Latin form of Greek myth name
Kepheus,
a king of Ethiopia and husband of
Cassiopeia,
meaning
gardener
Old French occupational
surname
transferred to English forename use, meaning
candle merchant
Chase, hunt Anglo-Norman surname
transferred to English forename use. In the Middle Ages,
it was a byname for a hunter.
English name derived from the old
English/French nickname for a chancellor, meaning
keeper of records; secretary
Variant of English
Chauncey, meaning
keeper of records, secretary
English occupational surname transferred to forename
use, meaning
clerk; secretary
Variant of English
Clark, meaning
clerk, secretary
Occupational surname transferred to forename use, from
Dutch kuper, itself from kup "tub;
container," which in English became coop. A
cooper was a maker and/or fixer of vessels such as
buckets and barrels.
English occupational surname transferred to forename use, itself
from a diminutive form of Old French corde,
meaning
rope The occupation consisted of
making strings, cords, ropes, etc.
Tenant,
vassal Irish surname transferred to unisex forename
use, itself originally a nickname for a feudal servant, a member
of the Déise, a word which ultimately traces
back to Indo-European
dem-s, meaning
house
"Badger."
German nickname for a hunter of badgers or someone
having badger-like qualities, from the vocabulary word dahs
"badger."
English occupational surname transferred to forename
use, itself ultimately
from the Greek word diakonos, meaning
servant
English
occupational surname transferred to forename use, itself
from the Latin word decanus
meaning
dean; ecclesiastical supervisor
English name possibly derived from the Old French phrase
del roy, meaning
son/servant of the
king
(Deňrsa): Scottish/Gaelic form of Greek
Georgios,
meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Serbian form of
George,
meaning "earth-worker, farmer."
Romani
form of Serbian
Djordje,
a form of
George,
meaning
earth-worker, farmer
English name possibly derived from the Old English word drǽfend, meaning
hunter
Old English occupational surname transferred to forename use, meaning
door guard
Scottish name derived from Gaelic
Ceallair,
meaning
cellar worker
Modern form of Scottish
Eallair,
meaning
cellar worker
Spanish form of French
Fabrice,
meaning "craftsman."
Roman family name derived from the element faber, meaning
craftsman, smith
Italian form of French
Fabrice, meaning
"craftsman."
A variant of Hungarian Vargo,
itself a variant of Varga, an occupational
surname meaning
cobbler; shoemaker
Russian form of Greek
Therapon, meaning
"servant/worshiper."
From the Catalan occupational surname meaning
blacksmith Once
popular with Catholics who gave the name in honor of the Valencian saint
Vicente Ferrer.
Maker of arrows English occupational surname transferred to forename use, itself from Old French flechier (from Germanic fleche
arrow).
English occupational surname transferred to forename use, which could have derived from any of the following: Middle English foster
foster-parent, forster
forester, forster
shearer, or fuyster
saddle-tree maker
English and French occupational surname for a
moneylender, transferred to English forename use, from the Old French word gage, meaning
pledge, surety (against money lent)
Egyptian name meaning
hunter
Pet form of English
George, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Czech and
German form of English
George, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
English form of Greek
Georgios, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
French form of English
George, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Bulgarian and Russian form of English
George, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Unisex pet form of English
George and
Georgia, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Original Greek form of English
George, derived from georgos
"farmer" which is a compound of ge "earth" and ergein
"to work."
Russian form of English
George, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Esperanto form of English
George, meaning
earth-worker,
farmer
Latvian form of English
George, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Variant of Russian
Georgiy, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Romanian form of Greek
Georgios, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Diminutive form of Italian
Giorgio, meaning
"little earth-worker, farmer."
Italian form of Greek
Georgios, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Albanian form of English
George, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Macedonian form of English
George, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Irish name possibly composed of the word gobha and a diminutive suffix, yielding
little smith
Russian pet form of
Georgi, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Irish myth name of a smith god who provided weapons for the Tuatha De Danaan,
derived from the element gobha meaning
smith
Pet form of Russian
Yegor, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Variant of Macedonian
Gjorgji, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Basque form of Greek
Georgios, meaning
earth-worker, farmer
Pet form of Russian
Yegor, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Welsh equivalent of Irish smith god
Goibniu, meaning
smith
Chief/Great hunter Surname transferred to English forename use, itself composed of the Anglo-Norman French elements gros
chief, great and veneur
hunter
Hungarian form of Greek
Georgios, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Pet form of Hungarian
Gyorgy, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
Swedish form of Greek
Georgios, meaning
"earth-worker, farmer."
English occupational surname transferred to unisex
forename use, meaning
harp player
Welsh name meaning
old servant
Army-guard Anglo-Saxon name composed of the Old English elements here
army and weard
guard
Cz.
Occupational surname meaning
barber
High guard English surname transferred to forename use, itself ultimately of Scandinavian origin, composed of the elements ha
high and ward
guard, warden
English occupational surname
transferred to unisex forename use, meaning
hunter
Romanian form of Greek
Georgios,
meaning "earth-worker, farmer."