I am a Princess.

Or so this baby name book I was looking at says.

Fun fact: Cecil is Latin and means “blind”.

Do you know what your name means?

My name means “pure.” :rolleyes: Yeah, right.

My middle name, though I don’t care for it, has a pretty cool meaning: “renowned warrior.”

My name means ewe.

wait…

Mine means “Follower of Christ” hee hee hee…

I’m going to hell…

Eric is supposed to mean, IIRC, “kingly.”

From this site:
ERIC: From Old Norse name meaning “ever-ruling.”

Wanna move up to Queen, Silver?
If you’d like to read about King Eric (of Sweden) check here. Here’s a little snippet

Cecil < Caecilius < caecus, blind. A bit of a stretch, actually.

My name means “warrior of Mars.” The god, not the planet, folks.

NAME Brian
ORIGIN Celtic
MEANING In use in England since the Middle Ages. Possibly connected with the Irish word for Hill, thus He ascends. Also some texts define it as Strong or Powerful.

Lee (Scottish) = the less windy side e.g. of a hill. Also used in sailing.

err, I suppose I should mention what my name is…
Christopher or just Chris for everybody except my mother…

Corrine - From the ancient Greek name Korinna, which was derived from kore “maiden”.
Anne - “favour” or “grace” from the Hebrew name Chaanach. (Hannah)

There you have it. Along with my last name, which means “Crowned One”, I am a graceful, maidenly Queen.

dentarthurdent, I knew right away what your name is. It’s my son’s middle name.

Andrew. From the Greek Andros: ‘strong, manly.’

Just call me Butch.

MICHÈLE: French feminine form of Michael, “who is like the Lord?” Variant, Michelle (this would be me), exists.

My name is a question?!?!?

Woo!

Y’know, I was driving by this snowmobile dealership, and the sign said “THINK SNOW”. So the next day I went back because I wanted to take a picture of it. (No real reason why, I just thought it was cool.) But by the time I got there, it had been changed to “125 DAYS TILL X-MAS”.

According to my book:

Brian - “The strong” (Celtic)

Lee - “This may, with equally good authority, mean ‘lion’ (Latin), ‘meadow-dweller’ (Old English), ‘a shelter’ (Old English), ‘physician’ (Celtic), or ‘gray’ (Celtic).”

Taking my first and middle names together, I am apparently a “free little king”.

Erin. Irish for “peace”

Stephanie - Greek for “crown.”

IRL my first and last name mean: “Tattooed (or blue) individual of the Estate (court, large farm) of Ironshrubbery (small to medium sized woody vegetation sharing characteristics with iron) on a Sandy Height (overgrown dune)”.

Translating this required mixing Pictish and early Low Germanic tongues.

My name, as I spell it, does not exist on the website that thinks linked to. However, I know it’s just an alternate spelling issue so (bolding the way I spell it):

TANYA: Russian diminutive of Tatiana, the Russian equivalent of name of Italian mythical fairy queen.

Variant, Tania, Tanja exists.

My first name, Amanda, means “loveable” or “worthy of love”

Oh, how true that is! :wink:

Wendy. Has no real meaning, other than the oldest sister in the Peter Pan tale. Some books have arbitrarily decided it means “friend”, derived from Gwendolyn. That’s always bothered me a little, though I couldn’t tell you why.