Noble wolf Old
German name, composed of the elements adal
noble and wulf
wolf
Italian form of
Adolf,
meaning "noble wolf."
Swedish form of
Adolf, meaning
"noble wolf."
English form of
Adolf,
meaning
noble wolf
Feminine form of
Latin
Adolphus,
meaning
noble wolf
Spanish form of
Adolf,
meaning "noble wolf."
Latin form of
Adolf,
meaning
noble wolf
African Luo name meaning
wolf
Variant of Anglo-Saxon
Bardulf, meaning
bright
wolf
English form of Anglo-Saxon
Bardulf, meaning
bright wolf
Bright wolf Anglo-Saxon name derived from the Old English elements berht
bright and wulf
wolf
Variant of Anglo-Saxon
Bardulf, meaning
bright
wolf
Little wolf Old Gaelic byname composed of the word cano
wolf and a diminutive suffix.
Scottish form of Irish/Gaelic Conall,
meaning
strong as a hound/wolf
Diminutive form of Irish/Gaelic Conall,
meaning
little one who is strong as a hound/wolf
English form of Irish/Gaelic
Cónán,
meaning
little hound/wolf
Hound/wolf-lover Irish myth name of a king
of Ulster. This is also the name from which English
Connor
was derived.
Variant of Irish
Conchobar, meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Variant of Irish
Conchobar, meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Variant of Irish
Conchobar, meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Variant of Irish
Conchobar, meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Variant of Irish
Conchobar,
meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Variant of Irish
Conchobar,
meaning
hound/wolf-lover
English form of Irish/Gaelic Conall,
meaning
strong as a hound/wolf
Variant of English
Connor, meaning
hound/wolf-lover
English form of Irish
Conchobhar,
meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Variant of English
Connor, meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Yellow hound/wolf Irish surname transferred
to forename use, itself from
Gaelic Ó Conbhuide
descendant of Cú
Bhuidhe
Yellow hound/wolf Irish/Gaelic name derived from the elements cú
hound/wolf and buidhe
yellow
Little hound/wolf Irish name derived from the element cú
hound/wolf, chief combined with diminutive suffix.
"Wolf." Romanian name derived from
Roman Dacia,
the name for the region that is today Moldova and
Romania. According to Strabo, the Dacians were
originally known as the daoi, from Phrygian daos, meaning
"wolf." It is interesting to note, too, that daoi
is the Gaelic word for a "wicked man."
Nickname for English
Adolph,
meaning
noble wolf
English form of Anglo-Saxon
Aethelwulf,
meaning
noble wolf
Variant of Irish/Gaelic
Faolán, meaning
little wolf
Little wolf Irish/Gaelic name composed of the element faol
wolf and a diminutive suffix.
Variant of Irish/Gaelic
Faolán, meaning
little wolf
"Spear-wolf."
German name composed of the elements ger
"spear" and wulf "wolf."
GUADALUPE:
English unisex name borrowed from a Spanish place name, itself from Arabic wādī
al-lubb, meaning
river of the wolf
Scandinavian name derived from Old Norse hamr, meaning "shape."
The name may have originated as a byname for a
"shape-shifter" or "werewolf."
Native American
Cheyenne name meaning
high-backed
wolf
Native American
Cheyenne name meaning
little wolf
Variant of Germanic
Hrodwulf, meaning "famous
wolf."
"Famous wolf." Old Germanic name composed of the elements hrod
"fame" and wulf "wolf."
Contracted form of Old Germanic
Hrodwulf, meaning
"famous wolf."
Old Norse form of Germanic
Hrolf, meaning
famous wolf
Variant of Bulgarian
Ivaylo, possibly
meaning
wolf
Bulgarian name, possibly meaning
wolf
Little wolf Irish surname transferred to forename use, itself
from Gaelic surname Mac
Coinín son of Coinín
Variant of English
Connor,
meaning
hound/wolf-lover
Native American
Cheyenne name meaning
little wolf
(?) wolf Old Norse name of which the first element is unknown,
while the second is from úlfr
wolf
Spanish form of Latin
Lupus, meaning "wolf."
French form of Latin
Lupus, meaning
wolf
Variant of English
Lovell, meaning
little wolf
English surname transferred to forename use, itself from the Old
Norman French nickname Louvel, a diminutive of lou
wolf, meaning
little wolf
English surname transferred to forename use, itself a variant of English
Lovell,
meaning
little wolf
Wolf Nickname for English
Guadalupe (
river of the wolf).
Pet form of English
Lupe,
meaning
wolf
Latin name derived from the word lupus, meaning
wolf
Scottish surname transferred to unisex forename use, itself from the Old
Norse name
Liulfr, meaning
(?)
wolf
Latin form of Greek
Lykourgos, meaning
wolf-work
"Wolf-work." Greek myth name of a king who banned the cult of
Dionysus and paid dearly for it, composed of the elements lykou
"of a wolf" and ergon "deed, work."
Native American
Cheyenne name meaning
yellow wolf
Native American
Cheyenne name meaning
little wolf
English form of Irish/Gaelic
Fáolan,
meaning
little wolf
Chief; hound/wolf
Irish
surname transferred to unisex forename use, itself from Gaelic Ó Coinn,
meaning
descendant of Conn
"Wise wolf."
German name composed of the elements rad
"counsel" and wulf "wolf."
Variant of English
Ralph, meaning
wise wolf