The world is an infinitely vast place, and there are countless numbers of words that can be used to describe the feelings, sensations, and images these things evoke. Some of these words have been around for centuries, whereas others have only existed for a few decades. But no matter how long a word has been in use, it’s still possible to use the word incorrectly.
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What is a Meaning?
Meaning is the overall description of a particular thing. For example, if we were to look up the English word “tree” in an English dictionary, it would most likely say that “tree” means “a tall perennial woody plant with a pronounced elevated crown formed by the main trunk and branches; producing edible fruit, nuts, or resins”. This definition is a single meaning of the English word “tree”.
In addition to defining a word, dictionaries also define words by their synonyms and analogs. This can help the reader more easily understand how two words are alike and how they differ in meaning. It can also help writers more easily write their words, as well as more effectively communicate with others.
100 Names That Mean Wind Sky Storm
1. Aella
Albanian – Old (as in weather) atmospheric movement, gale, storm (noun)
2. Bora
Bosnian- Serbian – A cold, dry northeastern wind in the Adriatic and Mediterranean regions, bringing rain in the winter on the East coast of Italy ; [noun] a very cold and strong north wind that blows over Triest and adjacent parts of Slovenia, Austria , Croatia, Bosnia – Herzegovina, Albania, and Dalmatia (noun)
3. Alizee
French – Little gust of wind, zephyr; particularly the sweet and gentle one that blows in the spring (noun)
4. Brise
French- Light blow or gust of wind, breeze; especially a sea breeze (noun)
5. Buster
American – A sudden bout of unexpected severe weather; a storm or winds that are stronger than usual for the time of year (noun).
6. Alizeh
Arabic – A light dry northerly wind that blows in the winter over the east coast of Spain and Portugal.
7. Chanterelle
French – A small mushroom with a white cap and bluish-black gills; any of several similar species found in cool, shady woods in Europe and North America.
8. Diabate
Arabic – South wind; southwest wind.
9. Canadian
American – A very cold northeast wind that blows over New England, esp. in winter.
10. Alya
Thai – A strong north wind in the North and Northeast of Thailand.
11. Beng
Mongolian – Pretty fine, sharp, gentle air or current; the wind that blows over the Gobi desert.
12. Elvis
Hawaiian – A playful wind on Oahu. A light tropical breeze. “Elvis” is also a local soft drink made from pineapple juice and sugar.
13. Diara
Finnish – A wind that blows in Romania.
14. Kadisha
Arabic – A very small amount of something; any very brief instant.
15. Lezginka
Russian – The stately national dance and music of the Lezgin people (noun). (The word Lezgin is a loanword from Persian.) .
16. Amihan
Tagalog – The northeastern wind on the Philippine islands, especially on Luzon, is a northeast wind that brings rain during the northeast monsoon.
17. Alvaro
Spanish – A northeast wind that affects Spain and Portugal in winter.
18. Alban
Albanian – Old (as in weather) atmospheric movement, gale, storm, a balmy northeastern wind; especially the cold northeasterly wind which blows over Albania, Epirus, and all of Greece during winter.
19. Anemone
Greek – A plant or flower with a funnel-shaped cluster of flowers at the end of a stem; a periwinkle.
20. Alias
Arabic – Short period, esp. the period in which the season changes from one to another.
21. Anila
Indonesian – A tonic wind from the northwest; a northeasterly wind in Indonesia.
22. Digger
Australian – A strong wind that blows in winter on the northern side of the country, especially at night. It is sometimes called the dasher because it is said to take away that and hurries. The name is used for any strong, cold wind that blows slowly through areas of sparse vegetation.
23. Audra
Welsh – (the name for) a strong east wind that comes from the Atlantic Ocean and affects the west coast of Wales.
24. Algiers
English – A light northwest wind that blows from the English Channel to western France in the fall and winter.
25. Alanda
Spanish, Central America – The northeast wind prevails in Nicaragua and Honduras between early October and late February or early March. It is strongest during January.
26. Almond
English – A small, edible nut with a rough oval shell enclosing a sweet fleshy edible kernel. The almond tree is ornamental and grows in mild regions.
27. Aureole
French – Light play of colours around someone or something.
28. Anemoi
Greek – The gods of the winds in Greek mythology (plural).
29. Auretta
Italian – A little wind.
30. Bora
Croatian – A very cold north to northeast wind from the Gulf of Trieste that blows over Istria and Dalmatia, Italy. It is strongest in winter and early spring.
31. Antheos
Greek – Greek god of the east wind
(Anemoi)
32. Lalo
Tagalog- A strong, dry blowing wind that affects Manila in January and February.
33. Alizebeth
English – The sister of Anne Boleyn, a daughter of Thomas Boleyn and Elizabeth Howard (noun) .
34. Breeze
English – The gentle wind of the sea.
35. Añaon
Spanish – (the name for) any summer northeast wind on the Basque coast of Spain and France. The most common is the so-called “Llobregat” which affects Barcelona.
36. Alayna
Czech – Little wind; a gently blowing wind; a cool breeze.
37. Ana
Spanish – Northerly wind; northeast wind.
38. Alba
Spanish – A northwesterly wind that blows over the whole of Spain and Portugal in the autumn and winter. It is also called the Levante (from the name of the island Lesbos).
39. Brisa
Spanish – A gentle breeze (noun) .
40. Celeste
Spanish – A breezy, light wind; a gentle breeze.
41. Anoushka
Indonesian- A force or current of wind from the northeast; a northeast wind that blows over Indonesia. The name is also used in Irian Jaya to refer to the northeasterly trade winds that blow across the east coast of Papua New Guinea during the dry season.
42. Era
Turkish – A warm southerly wind which blows in Turkey in the summer.
43. Bella
Italian – Beautiful. Elegant, stylish..
44. Bryce
Scottish – A strong, dry, cool wind that blows down from the Highlands of Scotland.
45. Hurricane
English – A violent tropical windstorm with high winds and much rain and often great destruction.
46. Bianca
Italian – White; pale or light-colored (noun) .
47. Arion
Greek- (the name for) the ancient Greek poet who immortalized the story of Hero and Leander; a happy, gay, lively young man.
48. Ilma
Croatian – Wind.
49. Georgia
English – A state in the southeastern U.S.; one of the original 13 colonies; Confederate States of America during the American Civil War.
50. Makani
Hawaiian – A wind that blows from the southeast in Hawaii.
51. Cabrera
Spanish – A light and brisk wind that blows over the Balearic Islands of Spain. It is also called the capital (from the name) .
52. Bekk
Norwegian – A strong northerly wind (noun) .
53. Meltem
Turkish – A warm southerly wind which blows in Turkey in the summer.
54. Brise
French – A wind tempered by the sea.
55. Ana
Spanish – A northwesterly wind that blows over the whole of Spain and Portugal in the autumn and winter. It is also called the Levante (from the name of the island Lesbos).
56. Miku
Japanese – A river that flows north across the Pacific Ocean into the Sea of Japan. It is known as the “Peace River” in Canada and the United States, and as the “Milk River” in Japan.
57. Alp
Austrian – A mountain passes through a mountain range, esp. one that gives access to a valley with a region of valuable mineral deposits.
58. Mystral
French – The pleasant, warm breath of a southern wind that blows over the Mediterranean.
59. Alegria
Spanish – Joyful, gay; merry.
60. Argo
Greek – A swift, swift-moving river in Nubia marked on the map by the inclusion of a crocodile in its name (plural) .
61. Nasima
Indian – A wind that blows from the northwest in India and Pakistan. It is a northerly monsoon wind that affects NW India in the winter. The name is also used for another wind (called the sharif) that blew over this region of the world during the Medieval Period (1000–1500 AD).
62. Kamaza
Finnish – A strong, cool, east to northeast wind that blows over Finland in late November and December. It is strongest near the Gulf of Bothnia and over Lapland.
63. Scirocco
European – A common name for many Mediterranean winds.
64. Anemos
Greek – A Greek god of the wind (noun) .
65. Dafne
Spanish – A northwesterly wind from the Mediterranean Sea which blows over northern Spain during the autumn and winter (noun) .
66. Sefarina
Italian – A small, strong wind.
67. Mistral
French – A cool, strong northwesterly wind that blows out of the Alps over southern France and northern Italy at certain times of year. It is also called the tramontana in Italy.
68. Tadita
Spanish – A strong northwesterly wind that blows over the Balearic Islands of Spain in the winter.
69. Varda
French – A light wind from the northwest.
70. Murmillo
Greek – (the name for) a young man of good fortune who has a dream and has been given money by Acrisius, king of Argos, to buy a ship and defend it (‘murmillo’ means ‘sea horse’).
71. Tsisana
Spanish – A fair-weather, blustery wind that blows out of the Bay of Biscay, in SE Spain and SE France. It is also called the “galeb”, from the French “gale”. It usually occurs from late spring to early autumn.
72. Gaira
Serbian – Little wind; a gentle breeze; a cool breeze.
73. Tuuli
Finnish – A gentle, cold, northeasterly wind that blows out of the Baltic Sea. It usually occurs in late spring and is known as a “Tornio” or “Ilmatar”.
74. Wind
English – A breeze; a light breeze; a slight breeze.
75. Dafne
Spanish – A northwesterly wind from the Mediterranean Sea which blows over northern Spain during the autumn and winter. It is also called the northerly monsoon wind that affects NW India in the winter. The name is also used for another wind (called the sharif) that blew over this region of the world during the Medieval Period (1000–1500 AD).
76. Zephyrine
French – A light warm wind or a wind that blows from the west or southwest.
77. Kapnikarea
Greek- (the name for) an ancient Greek goddess of flowers and springtime who later became a muse of lyric poetry used by the Roman poet Ovid in his Metamorphoses; a nymph after whom Mount Ida was named.
78. Aeolus
Greek- A chthonic god of the winds.
79. Pyrenees
French – The Pyrenees are a series of mountain ranges running from Spain to the south of France and merge into the Alps in Switzerland. The most famous mountain range is the Pyrenees in Spain which has a border with France and is known as “the spine” (from Latin Pugne, or literally, “tongue”).
80. Aither
Greek – (the name for) the god of the upper air and the clear skies who was one of the twelve Olympians, son of Erebus and Nyx, younger brother of Hemera, and husband/brother of his sister-in-law/wife Dione.
81. Anil
Indian – The Indian word for east, used in the names of winds that blow from that direction.
82. Xana
Spanish – A northwesterly wind from the Mediterranean Sea which blows over northern Spain during the autumn and winter. It is also called the northerly monsoon wind that affects NW India in the winter. The name is also used for another wind (called the sharif) that blew over this region of the world during the Medieval Period (1000–1500 AD).
83. Anvindr
Icelandic – The wind from the north.
84. Mohorovičić
Croatian – Mentioned in a song by the Croatian singer Gibonni. It is a mountain on the island of Brač in the Adriatic Sea which has a height of .
85. Bayu
Indonesian – A growing, young and vigorous person or animal.
86. Ostrovo
Spanish – An island in the North Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Brittany (noun) .
87. Sirocco
European – A common name for many Mediterranean winds.
88. Caelestis
Latin – The Roman name for the Greek god of the sky, or Uranus. He was one of the twelve Olympians, son of Hyperion and Theia, brother of Leto and Coeus.
89. Xisuthrus
Greek – (the name for) a legendary Sumerian king who saved all living things from a worldwide deluge.
90. Suha
Bosnian – A cool summer wind from the south.
91. Ister
Greek – (the name for) one of the largest rivers of the ancient world, it flowed from its source (in present-day Bulgaria) across Greece and northwest Turkey into the Black Sea.
92. Eyvindr
Icelandic – A man’s name and the name of a king of Norway.
93. Desna
Ukrainian – A river in Ukraine.
94. Fujin
Japanese – (the name for) the color white, just as the word “fuji” means “mountain peak”.
95. Dola
Welsh – A small wind that blows from the West over Wales and NE England. It is also called a Mwst or an arnel. The wind is believed to be the same cold and gusty wind that blew in Wales during mediaeval times, when it was known as the gwyllt .
96. Guthrie
Scottish – A cool, gentle, northwesterly breeze that blows over the Hebrides and Orkney Islands of Scotland.
97. Kora
Spanish – (the name for) a warm wind from the south that affects the Balearic Islands of Spain in the winter. The name is also used for another wind (called the sharif) that blew over this region of the world during the Mediaeval Period.
98. Ilmari
Finnish – (the name for) a strong, warm wind that blows from the mountains of Finland.
99. El Niño
Spanish – The world’s largest oceanic current system which originates in the eastern and central Pacific Ocean and affects weather across the globe.
100. Gales
English – A cool, light wind or a gentle breeze or a faint breeze.