- Wilny
- Wilu
- Wind
Wind Name Meaning. English: topographic name for someone who lived near a pathway, alleyway, or road, Old English (ge)wind (from windan 'to go'). English, German, and Danish: nickname for a swift runner, from Middle English wind 'wind', Middle High German wint 'wind', also 'greyhound'. German: variant of Wendt.
- Witashnah
- Wokaihwokomas
The name Wokaihwokomas is a Native American baby name. In Native American the meaning of the name Wokaihwokomas is: White antelope.
- Woods
Woods is a name that first reached England following the Norman Conquest of 1066. The Woods family lived in Leicestershire. Further research showed the name was derived from the Old English word wode, meaning wood, and indicates that the original bearer lived near a wood.
- Wuliton
- Wunand
- Wuti
- Wuyi
- Wyanet
Native American Meaning: The name Wyanet is a Native American baby name. In Native American the meaning of the name Wyanet is: Beautiful.
- Wymer
Recorded today in the spellings of Wimlett, Wimlet, Wimmer, Wimmers, and Wymer, but originally only recorded in the latter spelling, this is a very rare English surname. However spelt it is a derivative form of the pre 7th century Anglo-Saxon personal name 'Wigmar' or the slightly later Breton 'Wimarch'.
Meaning: Famous in battle
Origin: American - Wynono
Native American Meaning: The name Wynono is a Native American baby name. In Native American the meaning of the name Wynono is: First born.
- Wyome
The name was used earlier for the Wyoming Valley in Pennsylvania, and is derived from the Munsee word xwé:wamənk, meaning "at the big river flat". The main drivers of Wyoming's economy are mineral extraction—mostly coal, oil, natural gas, and trona—and tourism.
- Wyoming
Depending on who you talk with, the word “Wyoming” in Delaware Indian language means either "large plains" or “mountains and valleys alternating;” in Munsee language "at the big river flat;” or in Algonquin “a large prairie place.”