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Braun is a surname, originating from the German word for the color brown. In German, Braun is pronounced – except for the "r", equal to the English word "brown". In English, it is often pronounced like "brawn". Notable people with the name include:
Bruno is a given name and surname of Old Irish, French, Italian, Latin and Germanic origin. In the Latin languages, it comes from Brunus, An Bru’, Brun, and Brugh; Bruno is a Latin name as well as Germanic (Braun) name composed of the root brun-, which can mean burnished (polished, brown, with luste), also present in the words/names braun (in German) and brown (in English) and Bruno (in Latin.)
The name also originates independently in the United States, as an Anglicization of other surnames, such as the German Braun, or other surnames with similar meanings. [5] It can also arise as a translation from the Gaelic Donn ("brown"). [5] [9] The Mac A Brehon clan of County Donegal have anglicized as Brown or Browne since about 1800. [10]
Braum is a surname. It is an Americanized form of the German surname Brahm, as well as an Ashkenazi Jewish surname which may have originated as a variant of Braun. [1] The 2010 United States Census found 250 people with the surname Braum, making it the 76,768th-most-common name in the country.
Braun and Cohen got married in July 2014 just six months after Us Weekly confirmed they were engaged. The following year, the pair grew their family with the arrival of son Jagger. The former ...
Förderkreis Braun Sammlung museum in Kronberg Company headquarters in Frankfurt am Main (1960). Braun GmbH (/ b r aʊ n / ⓘ "brown", German: ⓘ) is a German consumer products company founded in 1921 and based in Kronberg im Taunus.
It is also the name of Sri Vishnu. [citation needed] In Arabic, it means "spiritual." [citation needed] In Gaelic, Rohan is a variant of the name Rowan, which can mean red, red-haired, or rusty. [citation needed] In Japanese, it is an uncommon name, meaning "accompanying dew" and may be given either as a nom-de-plume or to a fictional character.
The Bulgarian name Rayna (Bulgarian: Райна) is a diminutive of Slavic names such as Radka that contain the element rad-, meaning “happy.” Raya, another name with unrelated origins from multiple cultures, is another Bulgarian variant of the name. [3] [4] Rayna or Raina can also be derived from a name of Germanic origin.