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From the old manor.
Rating: 2.50 (2 votes)
Diminutive of Alvin: Wise friend. From the Old English Aetheiwine, and also Aefwine, both meaning noble friend. Also a diminutive of Alvar: An Old English name meaning elf army.
Rating: 1.67 (3 votes)
Noble friend.
Rating: 3.56 (9 votes)
Wise friend. Friend of the elves. Feminine form of Alvin: From the Old English Aetheiwine, and also Aefwine, both meaning noble friend. Various forms of Alvin in use after the Norman Conquest became surnames, and also first names.
Rating: 3.00 (3 votes)
All-knowing.
Rating: 1.00 (1 vote)
Variant of Alice.
Rating: 3.67 (3 votes)
Child of the moon.
Rating: 3.33 (6 votes)
Immortal.
Rating: 3.50 (4 votes)
Beloved.
Rating: 3.63 (8 votes)
Variant of Andrew: Brave, Manly.
Rating: 2.83 (6 votes)
Variant of Anne or Agnes.
Rating: 4.00 (3 votes)
Gift of God's favor. Blend of Ann and Janet.
Rating: 3.00 (2 votes)
Variant of the Latin Amabel. Edgar Allan Poe's poem 'Annahel Lee' made the form Annabel popular throughout the English-speaking world in the 19th century. The form Annabelle became popular in the mid-2Oth century.
Rating: 3.13 (8 votes)
Variant of Annabel: Variant of the Latin Amabel. Edgar Allan Poe's poem 'Annahel Lee' made the form Annabel popular throughout the English-speaking world in the 19th century. The form Annabelle became popular in the mid-2Oth century.
Rating: 3.11 (9 votes)
Rating: 3.38 (13 votes)
Variant of Anne, meaning favor; grace.
Rating: 4.00 (4 votes)
Variant of Ann: A variant of Hannah introduced to Britain in the 13th century, made popular in the 14th century by the cult of St Anne. The form of the name varies with fashion:.
Rating: 2.76 (17 votes)
Diminutive of Ann frequently used as an independent name. Famous bearers: Markswoman Annie Oakley, famous in the musical 'Annie Get Your Gun'; cartoonist Harold Gray's 'Little Orphan Annie'; the traditional folk song 'Annie Laurie'.
Rating: 3.42 (12 votes)
From the pasture land of the noble.
Variant of Anthony: Highly praiseworthy. From a Roman clan name. In the 17th century, the spelling Anthony was associated with the Greek anthos meaning flower.
Rating: 3.17 (6 votes)
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