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2006-09-27 07:19:11 · 15 answers · asked by ????a?? ? 5 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

15 answers

Mabon (Welsh) "Son."

Mabry Possibly an Old English place name...

Mac (Gaelic) "Son of." Scottish and Irish surname prefix used as a given name or nickname...

Macadam (Scottish, Gaelic) "Son of Adam." Engineer Jon McAdam (19th century) gave his name to a popular method of paving roads.

Macallister (Scottish, Gaelic) "Son of Alistair." Alistair is the Scottish form of Alexander.

Macardle (Scottish, Gaelic) "Son of great courage."

MacArthur (Scottish, Gaelic) "Son of Arthur." World War II General Douglas MacArthur.

Macbride (Irish, Gaelic) "Son of the follower of Saint Brigid." Saint Brigid was an influential fifth-century Irish nun.

Maccabee (Aramaic) "Hammer." Also possibly from a Hebrew phrase meaning "Who is like unto thee among the gods, oh Lord!" This was the surname of a group of Jewish leaders who overthrew Syrian rule in the century before Christ...

Maccoy (Irish, Gaelic) "Son of Hugh." The phrase "the real McCoy" came from Scotland, and refers to something of the highest quality.

Mccrea (Irish, Gaelic) "Son of grace." Actor Joel McCrea.

Macdonald (Scottish, Gaelic) "Son of Donald." The McDonalds were a powerful Scottish clan.

Macdougal (Scottish, Gaelic) "Son of Dougal."

Mace (Middle English) "Heavy staff or club." A medieval weapon used by knights to break armor...

Macedonio (Spanish, Greek) "From Macedonia." Macedonia



Magnus (Latin) "Great." A royal name in Norway and Denmark...

Maguire (Irish, Gaelic) "Son of the beige one."

Magus (Latin) "Sorceror." The root of the word "magic...

Mahatma (Hindu, Sanskrit) "Great soul." A title for a person of great spiritual development which was given to Mohandas Gandhi.

Mahavira (Hindu) "Great hero."

Mahesh (Hindu) "Great ruler."

Mahir (Arabic) "Skillful."

Mahlon (Hebrew) "Sickness." Biblical name.

Mahmud (Arabic) "Praiseworthy." A popular name in the Arab world which comes from the same root as Muhammad.

Maimon (Arabic) "Faithful, dependable." Also possibly "good fortune...

Maitland (Old English) Possibly "meadow" or "Matthew's land...

Majid (Arabic) "Noble glory."

Major (Latin) "Greater." Surname that is also a military title.

Makani (Hawaiian) "Wind."

Makarios (Greek) "Blessed." The name of at least 73 Catholic saints.

[Top] [Next for Boys Names> Makena - Manchester]


Makena (Hawaiian) "Abundance." Also used in Gaelic as a variant of Makenna, from McKenna.

Makoto (Japanese) "Good."

Maks Variant of Max (Latin) "greatest...

Malachi (Hebrew) "Messenger of God." Biblical: a prophet and writer of the final book of the Old Testament...

Malak (Arabic) "Angel." From a common Semitic root with the Hebrew source for the English name Malachi.

Malcolm (Scottish, Gaelic) "Devotee of Saint Columba." The name of the prince of Scotland who became king after Macbeth murdered his father...

Malden (Old English) Possibly "strong warrior's valley...

Malik (Arabic) "Sovereign." May be related to Malak (Arabic) "angel", equivalent of the English name Malachi...

Malin (Old English) "Little strong warrior."

Malki (Hebrew) "My king." The root of Melchior, one of the three kings' names.

Mallory (Old French) "Unlucky." From "malheure...

Malvin Variant of Melvin.

Mamun (Arabic) "Trustworthy."

Manasseh (Hebrew) "Making forgetfulness." The anglicized version that is popular in Israel...

Manchester (Old English) Place name: a city in northern England whose Latin name was Mancunium...

Mandan (Native American Indian) Name of a tribe native to the upper Missouri River which had developed high levels of material culture, but were almost wiped out due to smallpox in 1837...

Mandel (German) "Almond."

Manfred (Old German) "Man of peace." Used by Bryon for an antihero in an epic poem.

Mankato (Native American Indian) "Blue earth." Place name...

Mannheim (German) "Swamp hamlet." Place name.

Manley (Old English) "Shared land; man's meadow." Place name...

Mann (German) "Man." Author Thomas Mann.

Manning (Old English) "Son of the man." Football player Peyton Manning.

Mannix (Irish, Gaelic) "Little monk." Anglicized version of Munchin or Mainchin.

Mano (Hawaiian) "Shark." Figuratively, a passionate lover...

Manoach (Hebrew) "Place of rest." Blblical: the father of Samson.

Manolo Variant of Manuel...

Mansel (Old English) "From the manse." A manse is a house lived in by a clergyman.

Mansfield (Old English) "Field by the litle river." Place name.

Mansur (Arabic) "One helped by God and is victorious."



Manton (Old English) "Man's or hero's town." Place name.

Manuel (Spanish) Short form of Emmanuel (Hebrew) "with us is God...

Manville (Old French) "Great town."

Manzo (Japanese) "10,000-fold-strong third son."

Mar- (American) Blends based on Mark plus other names.

Marc (French)

Marcel (French) Variant of Marcellus (Latin) "little warrior", from Marcus...

Marcellus (Latin) A diminutive form of Marcus...

March (Old French) "Borderland, frontier." In Italy, "le marche" was a territory between two ancient kingdoms...

Marco (Italian, Spanish) Variant of Marcus...

Marcus (Latin) "Dedicated to Mars." The root of names such as Mark and Marcel...

Marden (Old English) "The valley with the pool." Place name...

Marek (Czechoslovakian, Polish) Variant of Mark.

Mareo (Japanese) "Rare, uncommon."

Mariano (Spanish, Latin) "Manly." Also possibly related to Mars...

Marino (Latin) "Of the sea." Marinus was the name of two saints: a third-century Roman martyr, and a legendary saint for whom the Italian republic of San Marino is named.

Mario (Latin) "Manly." From Marius...

Marion (English) Variant of Mary (Latin) "star of the sea...

Mark (Latin) "Dedicated to Mars." Anglicized version of Marcus...

Markell (German) Variant of Mark.

Markham (Old English) "Mark's village." Place name.

Marland (Old English) "Land near the lake." Also possibly "famous land" and the root of the name Marlon.

Marley (Old English) "Meadow near the lake." Place name...

Marlon (English) Possibly (Old French) "little hawk", or a variant of Merlin or Marcellus...

Marlow (Old English) "Driftwood." The original phrase literally means "lake leavings...

Marmaduke (Irish, Gaelic) "Follower of Saint Maedoc." The most famous of a number of saints named Maedoc was a sixth-century abbot of Clonmore in Ireland...

Marmion (Old French) "Little one." Used by Sir Walter Scott as the title of a popular narrative poem...

Maro (Japanese) "Myself."

Marom (Hebrew) "Height, peak."

Marquis (Old French) "Nobleman; lord of the borderlands." Originally a title of nobility for aristocrats whose holdings were situated in vulnerable border areas (the Marches)...



Marr (Old German) "Swamp." Place name...

Marriner (English) "Mariner, seaman, sailor." Not a traditional occupational name, as being a mariner was not a possible career...

Mars Mythology: the classical god of war.

Marsden (Old English) "Swampy valley." Painter Marsden Hartley.

Marsh (Old English) "Swamp." Surname...

Marshall (Old French) "Caretaker of horses." Occupational name...

Marshawn (American) A blend of Mar- and Shawn.

Marston (Old English) "Town near the marsh."

Martel (English) Variant of Martin.

Martin (Latin) "Dedicated to Mars." The name originates with the Roman war god, Mars...

Marvell (Old English) Possibly variant of Marvin or Martell, or derived from the verb "marvel...

Marvin (Welsh) "Sea friend." Variant of Mervin...

Marwood (Old English) "Lake near the woods." Place name.

Maryland Place name...

Masefield (English) "Corn field." Place name...

Maslin (Old French) "Little Thomas."

Mason (English) "One who works with stone." Occupational name...

Masos (Hebrew) "Happiness."

Massey Possibly derived from the German "masse" meaning "mass, measure", or possibly related to the Catholic Mass...

Mataniah (Hebrew) "God's gift."

Mather (Old English) "Powerful army." Surname of a dynasty of 17th and 18th century Massachusetts theologians, Richard, Increase, and Cotton Mather.

Matthew (Hebrew) "Gift of the Lord." Biblical: the name of one of the twelve apostles, who wrote the first Gospel account of the life of Jesus...

Matthias (German) Variant of Matthew (Hebrew) "gift of the Lord...

Maurice (Latin) "Dark-skinned, Moorish." Also possibly an Anglicized form of Muirgheas (Irish, Gaelic) "seafarer" and ultimately derive from the Phoenician term "mauharim", meaning "easterner...

Maverick (American) "An independent man who avoids conformity." A 19th-century American named Maverick refused to brand his calves as other ranchers did...

Max Short form of Maximilian, Maximo, or Maxwell...

Maximilian (Latin) "Greatest." The name of three Roman emperors and various saints...

Maxfield (Old English) "Field belonging to Mack." Artist Maxfield Parrish.

Maxwell (Old English) "Mack's stream." Place name...

Mayer (German, Hebrew, Latin) "Farmer; bright, shining; larger." Latin version of Major...


Mayes (English) Possibly related to corn as in "maize", or to the month of May, or to the veneration of the Virgin Mary...

Mayfield (Old English) "Strong one's field."

Mayhew (Old French) Variant of Matthew (Hebrew) "gift of the Lord...

Maynard (Old German) "Brave or hard strength." See Meinhard...

Mayo (Irish, Gaelic) "Yew tree plain." Place name...

Mazor (Hebrew) "Bandage."

Mc- (Scottish, Irish) Surnames occasionally used as given names.

McCoy (English) "Son of Aodh." Surname.

McKenna (Gaelic) "Ascend." From the Gaelic word "eirghe...

Mead (Middle English) "Meadow." Place name...

Medad (Hebrew) "Friend."

Medford (Old English) "Ford at the meadow." Place name.

Medwin (Old German) "Strong friend."

Meged (Hebrew) "Blessing, goodness."

Meilyr (Welsh) "Head ruler."



Mayes (English) Possibly related to corn as in "maize", or to the month of May, or to the veneration of the Virgin Mary...

Mayfield (Old English) "Strong one's field."

Mayhew (Old French) Variant of Matthew (Hebrew) "gift of the Lord...

Maynard (Old German) "Brave or hard strength." See Meinhard...

Mayo (Irish, Gaelic) "Yew tree plain." Place name...

Mazor (Hebrew) "Bandage."

Mc- (Scottish, Irish) Surnames occasionally used as given names.

McCoy (English) "Son of Aodh." Surname.

McKenna (Gaelic) "Ascend." From the Gaelic word "eirghe...

Mead (Middle English) "Meadow." Place name...

Medad (Hebrew) "Friend."

Medford (Old English) "Ford at the meadow." Place name.

Medwin (Old German) "Strong friend."

Meged (Hebrew) "Blessing, goodness."

Meilyr (Welsh) "Head ruler."

2006-09-27 07:24:30 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Melvin, Mark, Michael, Matthew, Moses, Monty, Mort, Marty

2006-09-27 07:40:33 · answer #2 · answered by tnmtngirl 5 · 0 0

Mitch
Michael
Marty
Marc, Mark
Mel
Merle

2006-09-27 16:21:20 · answer #3 · answered by fiestyredhead 6 · 0 0

you could desire to continuously bypass with universal names like Zach or Zupon. in case you're searching for names that have already been utilized in something of the fantasy sort, then Legend of the Seeker has a character named Zeddicus Zu'l Zorander. i've got continuously been prepared on the names Zander and Zane. reliable success arising with ones you quite like. :D

2016-12-12 16:12:39 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Monitorhead

2006-09-27 07:21:16 · answer #5 · answered by gotalife 7 · 1 0

michael mark markus mekos melvin milo mitch martin miles marvin mack mac mathew maxamillion max

2006-09-27 07:25:15 · answer #6 · answered by Jackie M 3 · 0 0

Milt
Morgan
Mel
mario

2006-09-27 07:22:16 · answer #7 · answered by LuckyS7evin 2 · 0 0

Mitchell & Monty

2006-09-27 07:25:14 · answer #8 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Well not any of Chris C's answers. lol

How about...
Moron
Monkey
Mad Dog
Mutant
Mistake
Maggot
Madman
Madcap
Malfunction
Morbid
Mangy

Whatcha think?? Good ones, huh???

2006-09-28 04:02:49 · answer #9 · answered by //////////////// 6 · 0 0

Mike
Marty
Martin
Mark
Montel
Mick
Mack

2006-09-27 07:22:17 · answer #10 · answered by thegirlsnextdoor2005 3 · 0 0

marvin michel michael max martin

2006-09-27 07:24:40 · answer #11 · answered by halokitty 3 · 0 0

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