Gaspare (also Gaspero, Gasperino and Gasparro) is the Italian translation of the English name Casper and Jasper (French Gaspard, Scandinavian Kasper and Jesper).
Gass Name Meaning. South German, Swiss, and Jewish (Ashkenazic): topographic name for someone who lived in a street in a city, town, or village, Middle High German gazze, German Gasse, Yiddish gas 'street', 'side street'. English: variant of Gash.
Gaston Name Meaning. French: from the Old French oblique case of a Germanic personal name, originally probably a byname from gasti 'stranger', 'guest', 'host'. Compare Guest. The surname is also found in England and Ireland, where it is probably a Huguenot importation.
The name Gautam (also transliterated as Gautama or Gauthama and a vrddhi patronymic of Gotama) is one of the ancient Indian names and is derived from the Sanskrit roots "gŐ(गः)" and "tama (तम)". "Tama" means "darkness" and "gŐ" means inter alia "bright light".
Gates Name Meaning. English: topographic name for someone who lived by the gates of a medieval walled town. The Middle English singular gate is from the Old English plural, gatu, of geat 'gate' (see Yates).
Gath Name Meaning. Scottish: reduced form of McGath. English: variant of Garth. North German (Gäth): variant of Gäde (see Gaede). North German: topographic name from Middle Low German gate 'street', 'alley'.
Meanings and history of the name Gatien: | Edit. French form of Gatianus. Saint Gatianus was a 3rd century Catholic Bishop and founder of Tours. Famous real-life people named Gatien: | Edit.
Suddenly, we're hearing the name Gatsby, as in "The Great" character by F. Scott Fitzgerald, used as a first name for girls as well as boys. The book's Jay Gatsby gussied up his name from Gatz, whose meaning is given variously as left-handed, cat, God, and person from Gat.
Etymology & Historical Origin - Gauge. Gauge is another form of Gage which are vocabulary words meaning “to ascertain by exact measurementsâ€. Both spelling variants have been used somewhat interchangeably since their first recorded existence dating back to Middle English.
The name derives from the Yorkshire dialectal term "gawk", used of a clumsy, simple person, with "Roger", used as a representative male personal name, although the original surname may have been bestowed on one "Roger" because of a particular incident that has not been recorded.