The name Blais is a Latin baby name. In Latin the meaning of the name Blais is: Lisp; stutter. Blaise Pascal was a brilliant seventeenth century child prodigy; mathematician; scientist and philosopher who invented the calculating machine and hydraulic press before dying at age thirty-nine.
Blaisdell Name Meaning. English (Cumbria and Lancashire): habitational name from a place in the Lake District named Blaisdell, from the Old Norse byname Blesi (from blesi 'blaze', 'white spot'), or from the same word used in the sense of a white spot on a hillside, + Old Norse dalr 'valley'.
French Meaning: The name Blaize is a French baby name. In French the meaning of the name Blaize is: Lisp, stutter.
Blake is a surname or a given name which originated from Old English. Its derivation is uncertain; it could come from "blac", a nickname for someone who had dark hair or skin, or from "blaac", a nickname for someone with pale hair or skin. Another theory is that it is a corruption of "Ap Lake", meaning "Son of Lake".
Blakelee is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 1423 times.
What does Blakeleigh mean? Blakeleigh [blakeleigh] as a name for boys has its root in Old English, and Blakeleigh means "dark meadow; pale meadow". Blakeleigh is a version of Blakely (Old English): place name.
The name Blakeley is an English baby name. In English the meaning of the name Blakeley is: From the light meadow; from the dark meadow.
Blakelie is a baby boy name its meaning is . Mostly popular in christian religion. The poeple have viewed this name 935 times.
Blakely Name Meaning. English, Scottish, and northern Irish: habitational name from any of various places in northern England and the Scottish Borders called Blakeley, named with Old English blæc 'black', 'dark' (see Black) + leah 'woodland clearing'.
This interesting surname of Anglo-Saxon origin, with variant spellings Blackmoor, Blakemore, and Blackmore, is a locational name from any of the various places called Blackmore in Essex, Wiltshire and Worcestershire, as well as Blackmoor in Dorset, derived from the Olde English pre 7th Century elements "bloec" meaning ...