Mac Ghille Bhuidhe is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 102 times.
Mac Ghille Dhuibh is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 611 times.
Scottish: sometimes an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Gille Dhuinn 'son of the servant of the brown one' (see Dunn). (According to Woulfe a name of the same form also existed in Sligo, Ireland.) ... The term originated as a humorous application of the Scandinavian female personal name Gunne or Gunnhildr.
Mac Ghille Mhichei is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 928 times.
The name Mac Nair is a Gaelic baby name. In Gaelic the meaning of the name Mac Nair is: Son of an heir.
MacAdhamh is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 870 times.
Last name: MacAlpin. SDB Popularity ranking: 3997. This famous Scottish clan surname is also popular in Northern Ireland. It derives from a personal name "Ailpean" from the Gaelic elements "alp" meaning hill and "ean or ain", small or little, the small hill.
It derives from a personal name "Ailpean" from the Gaelic elements "alp" meaning hill and "ean or ain", small or little, the small hill. Recorded in the main spellings of MacAlpine, MacAlpin and the shortened version McAlpine, this is one of the most prolific and earliest recorded of traditional Gaelic surnames.
MacAndrew. Buy JPG Image » The name MacAndrew originated among the descendants of the ancient Pictish clans. It is derived from the baptismal name Andrew which in Greek means manly. The name was popular as both a personal name and a surname, likely because it was the name of Scotland's patron saint.
Variant(s) MacAuley, Macauley. Macaulay, McAuley, MacAuley, and Macauley are surnames in the English language. There are several etymological origins for the names: all of which originated as patronyms in several Gaelic languages—Irish and Scottish Gaelic.