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V. Van Acker; Van Baer; Van Belleghem; Van Daele; Van Damme (disambiguation) Van de Vijver; Van de Walle; Van de Wiele; Van den Abeele; Van Den Berghe; Van den Bossche
Some common names are Northern Albanian clan names that double as place names such as Kelmendi and Shkreli. Other notable clan-origin names include Berisha, Krasniqi and Gashi. These sorts of names are very common in far Northern Albania and in Kosovo. Colors: of which Kuqi (red) and Bardhi (white) are the most commonly used as surnames.
Other male names: Joni (Indonesian for Johnny), and Budi (widely used in elementary textbooks). Ini ibu Budi (this is Budi's mother) is a common phrase in primary school's standardized reading textbook from 1980s until it was removed in 2014. [26] Popular female placeholder names are Ani, Sinta, Sri, Dewi.
Since Belgium has three national languages — Dutch, French and German — Belgian names are similar to those in the neighbouring countries: the Netherlands, France and Germany. Place names (regions, towns, villages, hamlets) with a particle meaning "from" (de in French, del in Walloon, or van in Dutch) are the most numerous. An uncapitalised ...
Riquet, Prince de Chimay in 1824 and Prince de Caraman 1856 by primogeniture; uniquely, since 1889 each male bears the title Prince de Caraman Chimay, while each female born in the family is a countess. Prince of Waterloo, since 8 July 1815, given as a victory title to the head of the Wellesley family, the Duke of Wellington.
Male given names. Given names. Given names by culture. ... Pages in category "Masculine given names" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of ...
The name is particularly common in French (from where the standard English pronunciation is derived), German (already in Middle High German), Dutch, and Afrikaans. In these instances Michel is equivalent to the English personal name Michael, although in Dutch the name Michaël is also common. Mitxel is the Basque form of Michael.
Lithuanian names follow the Baltic distinction between male and female suffixes of names, although the details are different. Male surnames usually end in -a , -as , -aitis , -ys , -ius , or -us , whereas the female versions change these suffixes to -aitė, -ytė, -iūtė , and -utė respectively (if unmarried), -ienė (if married), or -ė (not ...