The name Maryan is an English baby name. In English the meaning of the name Maryan is: meaning bitter, often used as English surname.
Masson is a French and Scottish surname, which is an example of convergent etymology in that the French Masson may derive from marsh dweller and the Scottish from MacMhathain (clan of the bear) (variants include Maçon, Mâcon, Mason), and may refer to: André Masson (1896–1987), a French artist.
The name Maverick is an English baby name. In English the meaning of the name Maverick is: When a nineteenth-century American named Maverick refused to brand his calves as other ranchers did; his name came to signify an independent man who avoids conformity.
Origin of the name Maxwell: Transferred use of the Scottish surname originating from a place-name derived from the name Maccus (great) and the Old English wielle (spring, pool) or wella (stream). The name was indicative of one who dwelled at Maccus' spring or the stream of Maccus.
Maxy as a name for boys (also used as girls' name Maxy) is of Latin origin, and the meaning of the name Maxy is "greatest". Maxy is a variant form of Maximilian (Latin). Maxy is also a variation of Maximus (Latin): Roman family name derived from maximus.
Mel can be the abbreviated version of the given names Melvyn, Melvin, Melanie, Melina, Melinda, Melissa, Melody, Melitta, Melchior or Melville. It is also a standalone name from the Gaelic Maol, meaning bald; this was used to refer to tonsured men to mean servant, as in "Maol-Iosa" - Servant of Jesus.
Etymology. The modern name Melinda is a combination of "Mel" with the suffix "-inda". "Mel" can be derived from names such as Melanie meaning "dark, black" in Greek, or from Melissa (μÎλισσα) meaning "Honeybee" in Greek.
Melvin Name Meaning. Scottish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Gille Bheathain (see McIlwaine). Scottish: variant of Melville 1. Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Maoil MhÃn 'descendant of the devotee of MaoilmhÃn', a personal name meaning 'gentle chieftain'.
Mercer is an English and Scottish surname. It is an occupational name, derived from the Old French word "mercier" or "merchier", meaning a merchant: originally one trading in textiles (mercery).
Origin of the name Mercy: Taken from mercy (compassion, forgiveness, pity), which is derived from the Latin merces (payment, reward). The name was popular among the Puritans in the 16th and 17th centuries but is now less common.