Names Categorized "Jerry"
18 Names found
Gerald is a masculine given name of Germanic origin, composed of the elements ger meaning "spear" and walt meaning "power, authority", thus translating to "power of the spear". The name was introduced to Britain by the N...
Gerard is a masculine given name of Proto-Germanic origin, common in English, Dutch, Polish, and Catalan, among other languages. It is a dithematic name, composed of two Old German elements: ger meaning “spear” and hart...
Jared is a masculine given name of Biblical derivation. In the Old Testament, Jared (Hebrew: יֶרֶד, Yereḏ) is the sixth-generation descendant of Adam, the father of Enoch, and an ancestor of Noah. The name is traditional...
Jarrett is an English masculine given name. It is a patronymic surname-based adoption, derived as a variant of Garrett. The surname Jarrett itself originates from medieval English and Norman sources, representing a form...
Jerahmeel is a masculine name derived from the Hebrew יְרַחְמְאֵל (Yeraḥmeʾel), meaning "God will have pity" or "God has compassion." The name combines the elements רָחַם (raḥam), meaning "to pity" or "to have compassion...
Jerald is a masculine given name that originated as a variant of Gerald, a Germanic name meaning "power of the spear", from the elements ger meaning "spear" and walt meaning "power, authority". The name Gerald was introd...
Jeremiah is a masculine name of Hebrew origin, derived from the Hebrew name Yirmeyahu, meaning "Yahweh will exalt." The name comes from the roots רוּם (rum) meaning "to exalt" and יָהּ (yah) referring to the Hebrew God.E...
Jeremias is a form of Jeremiah used in several languages, including German, Portuguese, and Finnish. It also appears in some English translations of the New Testament. The name derives from the Hebrew Yirmeyahu, meaning...
EtymologyJeremiel is the Latin and English form of a name that appears in the apocryphal book of 2 Esdras (also known as 4 Ezra). It is derived from the Hebrew name Jerahmeel (Yeraḥmeʾel), which means "God will...
Jeremy is an English masculine given name, originating as a medieval vernacular form of Jeremiah. While the biblical name Jeremiah was not widely used in England until after the Protestant Reformation, the shorter Jeremy...
Etymology Jeriah is an English Bible name meaning "taught by Yahweh", derived from the Hebrew elements yarah (meaning "to teach") and yah (a shortened form of Yahweh, the Hebrew God). The name appears in the Old Testamen...
Jericho is a masculine given name of English usage, directly taken from the name of one of the world's oldest cities, located in the West Bank, Palestine. The city of Jericho has a history spanning over 11,000 years, wit...
Jermaine is a masculine given name of Latin origin, derived from the French given name Germain, which in turn comes from the Latin Germanus, a Roman cognomen meaning "brother" in Latin. The Latin root was borne by severa...
Jeroboam is a significant biblical figure, known as the first king of the northern Kingdom of Israel after the division of the United Monarchy. The name is derived from the Hebrew יָרָבְעָם (Yarovʿam), which means "the p...
Jerold is a masculine given name of English origin, functioning as a variant of Gerald. The name essentially carries the same etymological roots as Gerald, deriving from a Germanic name meaning "power of the spear", comp...
Jerome is an English masculine given name derived from the Greek name Hieronymos (Ἱερώνυμος), which combines the elements hieros (ἱερός), meaning "sacred," and onyma (ὄνυμα), meaning "name." Thus, Jerome literally signif...
Jerrold is a masculine given name used primarily in English, conceived as a variant of Gerald, with the spelling changed under the influence of names like Jerome. Along with its close spelling variants, Jerrold shares th...
Jerry is a common English given name, typically used for males, that originated as a diminutive of several longer names beginning with the same sound, most notably Jeremy, Jerome, Gerald, and Geraldine. It can also be a...