- Cuc - KUK
The meaning of the name “Cuc” is: “Chysanthemum”. Categories: Asian Names, Nature Names, Vietnamese Names.
- Cuini
Meaning: Queen.
Origin: Gaelic - Cullodena
Cullodena is a name for baby girls that is Scottish in origin. The Cullodena name is quite rare and is not ranked within the top one hundred names in Europe. ... The meaning of Cullodena is “from the mossy ground” and the meaning remains the same among the other forms of the name.
Meaning: From the broken mossy ground
Origin: Scottish - Cullodina
Meaning: From the broken mossy ground
Origin: Scottish - Cumania
The name Cumania originated as the Latin exonym for the Cuman-Kipchak confederation, which was a Turkic confederation in the western part of the Eurasian Steppe, between the 10th and 13th centuries. ... Hethum of Korykos described Cumania as "wholly flat and with no trees".
Meaning: Name of a saint
Origin: Irish - Cumina
The aromatic seeds (collectively) of this plant, used as a condiment and a flavouring. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Word origin of 'cumin' C12: from Old French, from Latin cumīnum, from Greek kuminon, of Semitic origin; compare Hebrew kammōn.
- Cundrie
Meaning: Woman who condemns percival
Origin: Scottish - Cundry
Guinea. Guinea was given its name by the Portuguese after a Berber word, aguinaw, meaning 'black man', or akal n-iguinamen, meaning 'Land of the Black Men'.
Meaning: Woman who condemns percival
Origin: Scottish - Cush
The name Cush is a Biblical baby name. In Biblical the meaning of the name Cush is: Ethiopians, blackness.
- Custelle
- Cuth
Meaning & History. Derived from the Old English elements cuþ "famous" and beorht "bright". Saint Cuthbert was a 6th-century hermit who became the bishop of Lindisfarne, an island off the coast of England. He was known as performer of healing miracles.
- Cuthah
Josephus places Cuthah, which for him is the name of a river and of a district, in Persia, and Neubauer says that it is the name of a country near Kurdistan.
- Cuthberta
Derived from the Old English elements cuþ "famous" and beorht "bright". Saint Cuthbert was a 6th-century hermit who became the bishop of Lindisfarne, an island off the coast of England. He was known as performer of healing miracles.