The girl's name "Louise" is actually a French form and has been borrowed in the French form into English and German both. It is the feminine of French "Louis," but French "Louis" originally comes from German "Ludwig," which comes from Chludwig meaning "warrior of fame," and was the name of several early Frankish kings; in Latin Chludwig was Latinized as "Clovis," so that is another form of the same name (in Latin).
parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English. parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English. parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English.
English: "Russia" = German "Russland".
Glauben is faith in German.
Same for English but with a German Accent.
English: "the stockings" is German: "die Strümpfe".
Louise English was born in 1962.
Louise English is 5' 4".
According to some websites, Lula is related to Louise (Old German) and Luella (Old English).
Louise is the feminine form of Louis which comes from the German for famous warrior
An English actress.
Edna is the soldier.
To know what Lois means in Arabic you must know the meaning in English. Lois is the feminine of louise which is derived from the German word loo eez, this German word roughly translates to well known fighter.. fighter in Arabic is mujahid. So technically Lois would translate to Mujahid in Arabic..
Roderich Cescotti has written: 'Luftfahrt-Definitionen' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Aviation dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Luftfahrt-definitionen, Englisch-Deutsch/Deutsch-Englisch = Glossary of aeronautical definitions, English-German/German-English' 'Aerospace Dictionary, German to English and English to German' 'Glossary of aeronautical definitions; English-German, German-English' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language
Louise McNally has written: 'A semantics for the English existential construction' -- subject(s): English language, Semantics, Syntax
Deutsch is and English translation for German. And it is using English and German
Louise Sylvester has written: 'Middle English word studies' -- subject(s): Bibliography, English language, Etymology, Lexicology
The English name Louise doesn't have a hebrew translation. It is originally from the Germanic name Chlodovech which meant "famous warrior"