Definition
A character name from medieval romance literature, particularly Arthurian legends, known as a giant or powerful antagonist.
Etymology
From Old French 'Argante,' possibly derived from Latin 'argentum' (silver) or from Celtic/Germanic roots. The name appears in various medieval texts and may have been influenced by similar-sounding names in Indo-European languages.
Kelly Says
Argante shows how medieval writers created names that sounded powerful and foreign—by using combinations of Latin and Celtic-sounding syllables, they invented characters that readers instinctively understood were important, even if they'd never heard the name before.
Translations
ARالعربية
أرغانت
ar-gaan-t
BNবাংলা
আর্গান্ট
ar-gan-t
CACatalà
argante
ar-gan-te
CSČeština
argante
ar-gan-te
DADansk
argante
ar-gan-te
DEDeutsch
Argante
ar-gan-te
ELΕλληνικά
αρκάντη
ar-kan-ti
ESEspañol
argante
ar-gan-te
FISuomi
argante
ar-gan-te
FRFrançais
argante
ar-gan-t
HIहिन्दी
अर्गांट
ar-gan-t
HUMagyar
argante
ar-gan-te
IDBahasa Indonesia
argante
ar-gan-te
ITItaliano
argante
ar-gan-te
MSBahasa Melayu
argante
ar-gan-te
NLNederlands
argante
ar-gan-te
NONorsk
argante
ar-gan-te
PLPolski
argante
ar-gan-te
PTPortuguês
argante
ar-gan-te
RORomână
argante
ar-gan-te
RUРусский
арганте
ar-gan-te
SVSvenska
argante
ar-gan-te
SWKiswahili
argand
ar-gand
TAதமிழ்
அர் கான்ட்
ar-kan-t
TEతెలుగు
ఆర్గంట్
ar-gan-t
THไทย
อาร์แกนเต
ar-gan-te
TRTürkçe
argante
ar-gan-te
UKУкраїнська
арганте
ar-gan-te
VITiếng Việt
argante
ar-gan-te