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Pages in category "Armenian masculine given names" The following 95 pages are in this category, out of 95 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Some Armenian last names bear the suffix -նց ([nʦʰ]), which is a plural genitive suffix, transliterated as -nc, -nts or -ntz (as in Bakunts or Adontz), or in addition to -yan/-ian (as in Parajaniants). This is not common, although it used to be more widespread in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
This category includes Armenian given names. Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. A. Armenian feminine given names (24 P) M.
These old-fashioned boy names are due to come back around in a big way. According to Laura Wattenberg, creator of Namerology , historically, boys names didn’t come in and out of fashion in the ...
Dacian name having the same root "nap" (cf. ancient Armenian root "nap") with that of the Dacia's river Naparis attested by Herodotus. It has an augmentative suffix uk/ok i.e. over, great [37] Name derived from that of the Dacianized Scythian tribe known as Napae [59]
Armenian-language surnames (241 P) Pages in category "Armenian names" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
According to philologist Armen Petrosyan, the name Aram is likely an Armenian word that directly developed from Proto-Indo-European * rēmo-, meaning "black". [1] [2] Petrosyan argues that both Armenian Aram and Indic Rama derive from a "common" Indo-European myth about a hero whose name means black (PIE * h₂reh₁mo-) defeating a foe named "bright, white, silver" (PIE * h₂erg-). [3]
Hakob Melik Hakobian, real name of famous Armenian novelist Raffi Hagop Kassarjian (born 1946), Lebanese-Armenian politician, MP and minister Hagop Kazazian Pasha (1833–1891), high-ranking Ottoman official of Armenian origin who served as the Minister of Finance and the Minister of the Privy Treasury during the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamid II