The perfect baby name, history behind names, the random name generator, and much more in the Internet Names Database. INDb contains a whole catalog of names and surnames, with descriptions, history and curiosities about every name.
WADE (1) : Derived from the Old English place name wade meaning "a ford".
WADE (2) : From the Old English given name Wada, a derivative of the word wadan "to go".
WAGNER : From Middle High German wagener meaning "cartwright". This name was borne by German composer Richard Wagner (1813-1883).
WALKENHORST : Derived from the place name Falkenhorst in Germany, which means "wooded hill inhabited by falcons".
WALKER : Occupational surname for a person who walked on damp raw cloth in order to thicken it. It is derived from Middle English walkere, Old English wealcan.
WALLACE : Means "foreigner, stranger" from the Norman French waleis. It was often used to denote native Welsh and Bretons. A famous bearer was the 13th-century ...
WALLACH : From Middle High German walhe, walch "foreigner from a Romance country", probably a nickname for someone from Italy.
WALLER (1) : Derived from Old French gallier meaning "man with a pleasant temper".
WALLER (2) : Derived from Middle English walle denoting a builder of walls. Sometimes the name may be derived from Middle English welle meaning "(dweller by a) str...
WALTON : From any of several villages in England, from Old English wald "wood", wall "wall", or wælla "stream, spring" and ton "town".
WALTZ : From a diminutive of the given name WALTHER.
WANG (1) : From Chinese 王 (wáng) meaning "king, monarch". This is the most common surname in China.
WANG (2) : Nickname for someone with round or rosy cheeks, from Middle Dutch waenge, "cheek".
WANG (3) : Place name for someone who lived on or near a grassy area, from Middle German wang, literally "cheek", but also in southern German having the sense "g...
WANG (4) : Nickname for a Jew from Hungary, ultimately from Russian Vengria "Hungary".