Looking for the perfect name for your baby boy? Check out the 'Top 100 Christian Baby Boy Names Ending In Ts' for a blend of tradition and modernity. Our curated list features short and cool names that are easy to pronounce and remember. Whether you're seeking names for a Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, or Christian baby, you'll find modern, simple options that resonate across various religions and cultures. Discover the ideal name that balances uniqueness and ease in our comprehensive guide.
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The name Mats is a Swedish baby name. In Swedish the meaning of the name Mats is: gift from God'.
Meaning of name Maurits. Etymology : Dutch form of MAURICE. Saint : Origin : Dutch.
Roberts is a surname of Norman origin, deriving from the Norman given name Robert, meaning "bright renown" – from the Germanic elements "hrod" meaning renown and "beraht" meaning bright.
Danish Meaning: The name Lauritz is a Danish baby name. In Danish the meaning of the name Lauritz is: Laurel.
The name Frits is a boy's name of Dutch origin. Frits and discussed in our forums with posts like "Long Generation CAF". Dutch variation of Frederick. Variation of Fritz.
This is an Anglo-Scottish surname but of Norman-French and Germanic pre 7th century origins. Recorded as Walt, Watt, the diminutive Wattin, and the patronymics Watson, Wattins, Wattis, Watts, however spelt it derives from the popular medieval given name Walter.
Danylets is a baby boy name its meaning is ukrainian form of daniel judge. Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 1287 times.
Lorentz is a name derived from the Roman surname, Laurentius, which means "from Laurentum". It is the German form of Laurence.
The surname Keats is believed to have originated with the Anglo Saxon culture, perhaps from the old English word cyta or cyte, a worker at the shed, or an outhouse for animals, hence herdsman.
The name Yeats came to England with the ancestors of the Yeats family in the Norman Conquest in 1066. The surname Yeats is for a gatekeeper. The name was originally derived from the Old English word geat, meaning gate. It was also sometimes applied to people who lived near a prominent gate.
Etymology 1. From Middle Dutch niwet, niet, from Old Dutch *niowiht, niewiht, from nio (“never”) + wiht (“thing, creature”). The former in turn derives from Proto-Germanic *ne (“not”) + *aiw- (“ever”) + *wiht- (“thing”).
Derived from the Latin word patrician, meaning "noble", it is the feminine form of the masculine given name Patrick. The name Patricia was the second most common female name in the United States according to the 1990 US Census. It is commonly shortened to 'Pat', 'Patsy', Patti/Pattie', 'Trish' or 'Trisha/Tricia'.
Moretz is a variant of Moritz, a Germanized form of the biblical name Moses, based on the originally Hebrew Moshe. According to the biblical etymology, the meaning of the name is "I drew him out of the water" (Exodus 2.10).