Names that 'Ellie' might be short for, apart from Eleanor, include Elaine, Eliza, Helen, as well as any name ending in -elle, -ellie, -elly, -lie, -ley, -ly, -lee, and so on, such as Janelle, Shirelle, Amelie, Shelley ... there are heaps.
Other opposites of short include: lengthy (in time) sufficient (in quantity)
The ascending number names are based on Latin prefixes. But they begin at billion (which is short scale for 109). The following number names are trillion (1012), quadrillion, quintillion, sextillion, septillion, octillion, nonillion, and decillion.
There were two different numerical naming systems. One (the "short scale" system) had the ratio between successive new number names as 1000. The other (the "long scale" system) had it at 1,000,000. I guess it was reasonable (for people that used the long system) to say "thousand million" (10^9) and not feel like it needed a new name. So the next name (billion) wasn't used until the number that was a "million million" (10^12). Then you would have a thousand billion (10^15) and only a million billion (10^18) would be a "trillion." The short system (what everyone uses today) obviously preferred short names to long names and its advocates probably felt that "thousand million" was too wordy... so that became "one billion" Thanks for Reading
May is not abbreviated because it is already a short and easily recognizable name consisting of only three letters. Unlike other months that have longer names, abbreviating May would not enhance clarity or efficiency. Additionally, standard conventions for month abbreviations typically prioritize brevity while maintaining distinctiveness, which is already achieved with May.
Words or names that have the same vowel sound as the short 'e' in "ten" include:Bendefend (de with long e, fend with short e)denendfendgender (gen sounds same as ten)henJen / Jenny / Jennifer (Jen sounds same)Kenlensmenmen'sopen (pen sounds same)pententenniswhenyen
No, the name Ellie is not of French origin. It is commonly used as a short form of names like Eleanor or Elizabeth, which have English and Greek roots.
It is impossible to say how many people have a certain name. Not all countries register all births and record such things. Nor is there any centralised register. In addition similar names can be totally different in different languages and contractions of names differ from place to place.
There are various short names people use for the name Elisabeth. Some of the names are Liz, Lizzy, Beth, Eliza, Ellie, Bethy, Elsy, Belle, Bella and Lisbeth.
my other name is rotorua but u can can call me for short lua................................. ............:P:P
It is also refered to as AQWorlds or AQW for short.
No. Alex (short for Alexander, Alexandra or other names) is a proper noun.
Enzo is often short for Lorenzo or Vincenzo, both of which are Italian names. It can also stand alone as a given name. In some cases, it may be used as a nickname for other names starting with "En," but its most common associations are with the aforementioned names.
'Ellie' is short for 'Elizabeth.' 'Elizabeth' is 'Isabel' in Spanish. In Mexico, the diminutive of 'Isabel' is 'Chabela.' The diminutive of 'Chabela' is 'Chabelita.' The 'b' is pronounced as an English 'v'.
Will is usually short for William.
Elly had a few boyfriends in the various episodes of the Beverly Hillbillies. The 'Hollywood actors' had stage names like "Dash Riprock" and "Bolt Upright". Other boyfriends for Elly included Sonny Drysdale, Beau Short, beatnik Sheldon Epps and Mark Templeton, a frogman.
The UK is short for United Kingdom and is alternately called Great Britain, Britain and England, but in actuality, each of these names stands for different things.
It is a long A vowel word. The E is silent. Our child learned to read with the Zoophonics program. The "e" sound is represented by an elephant named Ellie. Ellie usually says the short vowel e sound, but when at the end of the word Ellie gets bossy and tells the vowel to say its name (the long vowel sound). In the word "shake", Ellie is at the end of the word and so she gets bossy and says, "A, say your name 'a'." Similarly, in the word "broke", bossy Ellie says "O, say your name 'o'."