Blinn Name Meaning. German: variant of Blinne, itself a variant of Blind.
Meanings and history of the name Blixa: | Edit Share what you know! Famous real-life people named Blixa: | Edit. Blixa Bargeld, from the industrial rock band Einstuerzende Neubauten and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. His stage name comes from Blixa, a German brand of blue felt pen.
Blood Name Meaning. English: evidently from Old English blod 'blood', but with what significance is not clear. In Middle English the word was in use as a metonymic occupational term for a physician, i.e. one who lets blood, and also as an affectionate term of address for a blood relative.
Americanized spelling of Dutch Bloem. Swedish: variant of Blom. English: metonymic occupational name for an iron worker, from Middle English blome 'ingot (of iron)'. The modern English word bloom 'flower' came into English from Old Norse in the 13th century, but probably did not give rise to any surnames.
Color name. My mother's name is Cynara (poetic) Sofia (meaning wise or wisdom) Blue (a maternal side/genealogy family surname), then her actual present and original surname of 2 syllables.
The name of this great American music probably originated with the 17th-century English expression “the blue devils,” for the intense visual hallucinations that can accompany severe alcohol withdrawal. Shortened over time to “the blues,” it came to mean a state of agitation or depression.
Bluford Name Meaning. Possibly English, a habitational name from a lost or unidentified place. The name occurs in records of the 19th century but is now very rare if not extinct in the British Isles.
The name Bly is a Native American baby name. In Native American the meaning of the name Bly is: Tall.
The ancestors of the Blyde family lived among the Strathclyde-Briton people in the Scottish/English Borderlands. It is a name for a happy or cheerful person. Further research revealed that the name is derived from the Old English word blithe, which described a person exhibiting the aforementioned characteristics.
Blyth is a surname of Scottish origin. It is derived from the Old English pre 7th Century "blithe", meaning a happy or cheerful person. Notable people with the surname include: Alan Blyth (1929–2007), English musicologist.