Hollye as a girls' name has its root in Old English, and the name Hollye means "the holly tree". Hollye is an alternate spelling of Holly (Old English).
Gorkem is a baby unisex name its meaning is magnificant pronounce grr-kem. Mostly popular in religion. The poeple have viewed this name 4186 times.
Origin of the name Cullen: Borrowed from the Irish, Cullen is the Anglicized form of the Irish surname Mac Cuilinn (son of Cuileann). Cuileann is an Irish name meaning “holly.” Var: Cullan, Cullin.
Either from the name of the shrub, which is from Old English word holen, or could have developed from the word holy. Holly is a flowering plant traditionally used at Christmas to decorate the house. Holly. 8. With lots of drive and determination, 8s can do almost anything they set their minds to.
Holeigh is a baby girl name its meaning is holly. Mostly popular in religion. The poeple have viewed this name 901 times.
Origin of the name Cullen: Borrowed from the Irish, Cullen is the Anglicized form of the Irish surname Mac Cuilinn (son of Cuileann). Cuileann is an Irish name meaning “holly.†Var: Cullan, Cullin. From A World of Baby Names by Teresa Norman.Buy the book.
The name Les is a Scottish baby name. In Scottish the meaning of the name Les is: Scottish surname and place name. From Leslie.
Meanings and history of the name Olin: | Edit. Middle English origin: From the word holly, the evergreen shrub or tree; (Middle English holi(n), Old English holegn). Old Norse origin: of the ancestors or "ancestor's heir" or "family's descendant" Swedish: "to inherit"
Holley is an English surname. It is either locational, ultimately derived an Old English hol lēah "[dwelling by] the clearing by the hollow", or descriptive, from hol-ēage "hollow-eyed". A masculine given name Hollie was derived from the surname, recorded in the United States for the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Lesly is a modernized (mostly American) spelling variation of Leslie. Leslie originated from a Scottish surname which itself derived from a place name in Aberdeenshire, northeastern Scotland, known as the lands of Lesslyn. The name likely comes from the Gaelic “les cuÃlinn†meaning 'garden of hollies.'